B.C. mom whose son died from wildfire smoke trying to make this year safer
As wildfires rage in British Columbia, the family of a nine-year-old who died last summer is trying to protect people from poor air quality due to smoke this year.
Carter Vigh died of asthma exacerbated by wildfire smoke in 100 Mile House, B.C., last July 11.
Seeing the wildfire season in full swing again is “scary,” his mother Amber Vigh said in an interview Tuesday, noting she is feeling “probably a little bit of PTSD.”
But Vigh is hoping that Carter’s Project, a partnership between the family and the BC Lung Foundation, will help make a difference.


