Residents, businesses still struggling after precedent-setting B.C. fire season
ASHCROFT, B.C. — Little remains of the wreckage from Angie Thorne’s home after a wildfire tore through her reserve in central British Columbia earlier this year.
The blackened concrete, twisted metal chairs and seared welcome sign have all been removed, replaced with gravel backfill.
“It’s heartbreaking but it feels good to be back here,” Thorne says, looking around the place she lived for 21 years.
“Our lives are still very much affected,” she adds, her voice catching. “It doesn’t just stop because the cameras are off and nobody is talking about the fire.”