B.C. officials should have issued warning about weather: First Nations leader
VICTORIA — The British Columbia government didn’t warn residents in flood-prone areas about the potential devastation of torrential rain that left hundreds of motorists stranded on severed highways hit by mudslides and caused at least four deaths, a First Nations leader says.
Terry Teegee, regional chief of the B.C. Assembly of First Nations, said the province could have acted faster after a heat dome this summer claimed nearly 600 lives and a wildfire destroyed much of the town of Lytton in the Fraser Canyon.
“This year alone there’s an expectation that everybody should just be ready by now,” Teegee said in an interview Monday. “First Nations communities are already at a deficit, even before a wildfire, even before a flood.”
Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth said the province is working with First Nations to involve them and meet their needs.


