July 3rd, 2025

Wheel fell off RCMP trailer, sparking Lytton, B.C., fire that triggered evacuations


By Canadian Press on July 3, 2025.

Mounties say a wildfire that has triggered evacuations near Lytton, B.C., was caused when a wheel fell off an RCMP trailer in what was a “tremendously unfortunate” incident.

Staff Sgt. Kris Clark said in a statement released Thursday that the “equipment failure” that sparked the Izman Creek fire, about 250 kilometres northeast of Vancouver, happened on Tuesday afternoon on Highway 12.

The wildfire began a day after the fourth anniversary of a fire that destroyed most of the village of Lytton, and it has now grown to 130 hectares.

The blaze has been upgraded to B.C.’s only wildfire of note, meaning it’s either highly visible to the public or threatens homes or properties.

Clark said that it appears the right-side wheel of the trailer was “ejected” in the incident that caused a fire in a grass-filled ditch.

An officer tried to put out the blaze with a fire extinguisher, but was unsuccessful, and the BC Wildfire Service quickly dispatched crews to fight the fire, he said.

The trailer was carrying equipment from a police dive team involved in the search for a missing swimmer in Seton Lake, about 100 kilometres northwest of Lytton.

The underwater recovery team was returning to the Lower Mainland when the equipment failure occurred, Clark said.

“This is a tremendously unfortunate set of circumstances that demonstrates the need for extreme caution and fire awareness during our long wildfire season,” the statement said.

The Izman Creek fire is among about 90 fires burning in the province.

The BC Wildfire Service said three helicopters and three initial attack crews have been assigned to the area to contain the blaze.

It said crews will continue structure protection and launch indirect attack methods.

The wildfire has triggered localized evacuation orders and alerts from the Thompson-Nicola Regional District, and an evacuation Alert from the Lytton First Nation.

The community is still in the process of rebuilding from the 2021 fire that killed two people and wiped out much of the village and part of the Lytton First Nation four years ago on Monday.

Village Mayor Denise O’Connor said on Wednesday that the timing of the latest wildfire has made it that much more impactful for community members.

“People just couldn’t believe that a fire would start on the anniversary,” O’Connor, who became mayor of Lytton a year after the 2021 wildfire.

She said there are many people in the area still struggling with post-traumatic stress disorder from four years ago.

The wildfire service said in its situational report on Thursday that cool conditions and thunderstorms are in the forecast for much of the province, bringing a low-to-moderate chance of lightning.

It said nearly 75 per cent of blazes burning in B.C. have been sparked by lightning.

The Fort Nelson area in the northeast is getting the most rain, which will help reduce the intensity of the fires there, the service said.

North and central B.C. are expecting seasonal temperatures, and while there may be a slight cooling in the south, hot and dry conditions are expected to linger, the service said.

The service said about 36 per cent of the wildfires actively burning in the province are classified as out of control, 30 per cent are being held and 34 per cent are under control.

— With Files from Curtis Ng in Edmonton

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 3, 2025.

Nono Shen and Brieanna Charlebois, The Canadian Press

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