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Wildfire evacuees tempted not to vote in Canada election
By Anne-Sophie THILL
Lytton, Canada (AFP) Sept 14, 2021

Biden visits burning western US ahead of California election stop
Sacramento (AFP) Sept 14, 2021 - US President Joe Biden flew into the scorched western states Monday to hammer home his case on climate change and the need for big public investments, on a trip that will also see him campaign in California's recall election.

A whistle-stop tour took him through Idaho, where he met firefighters who are among the tens of thousands of personnel battling huge blazes gripping the region, as it shrivels under a record drought.

He also flew over scorched forest in northern California to see part of the more than two million acres (8,000 square kilometers) of the state that has been burned already this year.

Scientists say man-made global warming is changing the climate, making wildfires more destructive and more frequent.

"We have to think big," Biden told an audience near California's state capital, Sacramento.

"Thinking small is a prescription for disaster... We're going to fight this climate change."

Biden's trip is aimed at highlighting his push to sell multi-trillion-dollar legislation aimed at renewing America's failing infrastructure so that it is better able to cope with the changing climate.

"Each dollar we invest in resilience saves up to $6 down the road when the next fire doesn't spread as widely. Those investments save lives.

"When I think about climate change, I think about, not cost, I think about good paying jobs we're creating. But I also think about the jobs we're losing due to impacts in the supply chains and industries, because we haven't acted boldly enough."

The president is focusing on what is becoming a familiar message on the urgency of an issue that has sparked huge fires and floods -- both of which have devastated different areas of the country in recent months.

"The reality is, we have a global warming problem," Biden told firefighters earlier in Idaho, echoing the scientific consensus that human activity is affecting the climate.

"Things aren't going to go back to what they were. It's not like you can build back to what it was before."

Biden, who has broken with the climate change skepticism of his predecessor Donald Trump, recently said the world faces a "code red" on climate change and called for parties to put aside their political differences to address the issue.

- California recall -

Biden was met in Sacramento by California Governor Gavin Newsom who is facing a recall vote that could cost him his job.

The pair head later to Los Angeles for a last minute rally in which Biden is expected to offer fellow Democrat Newsom his fulsome backing.

Californians will vote Tuesday on whether to oust Newsom, 53, in a recall election prompted by Republicans angered over Covid-19 mask mandates, a high cost of living and skyrocketing homelessness in the wealthiest and most populous state in the nation.

Eighteen years ago, a similar vote allowed Arnold Schwarzenegger to win California's governorship.

On paper, Newsom, a former mayor of San Francisco who was easily elected governor in 2018 and whose term does not end until next year, does not risk much in a solidly Democratic state.

After a shaky start, Newsom now appears likely to avoid defeat, with respected poll-crunching website fivethirtyeight.com predicting 55 percent will vote to keep him.

But Democrats are still taking the vote seriously, knowing that a surprise recall is always possible, especially if turnout is low.

On the front lines of global warming, evacuees from Lytton, a western Canadian village destroyed by wildfires in June, are detached and bitter about the upcoming September 20 snap elections.

Lytton, located 250 kilometers (155 miles) northeast of Vancouver, gained international attention for setting a new Canadian heat record of 49.6 degrees Celsius (121.3 Fahrenheit) before being ravaged days later by a fire that killed at least two residents.

More than two months later the town is deserted, with police checkpoints stopping people, even residents, from entering.

The town is flanked by fences that mask the devastation -- a burnt tree, charred cars, the cinder outlines of a house and a single intact road sign.

A rare motorist drives along a highway that runs through the town.

Sitting on a bench outside a bakery in the town of a Lillooet, north of Lytton, Micha Kingston watches her five-year-old daughter Mimi play with her two dolls, some of the few personal items the family saved as they fled their home.

"It's weird because I do feel like I am a refugee and that's not something that you associate with Canada, that's something you think of like somewhere else where there are wars," she told AFP, gripping a donated pullover with the Vancouver Winter Olympics logo on the front.

- 'Nothing ever changes' -

Kingston, who is a single mother, and her daughter are among the 250 Lytton residents forced to flee when flames reached the town.

Some 33,000 people in British Columbia have been displaced by forest fires this summer, and nearly 1,600 fires have been recorded in the province, making it the third most devastating season in terms of hectares burned.

One week before Canada's national election around 200 fires are still active, including the fire that ravaged Lytton.

Those fires were made worse by a heat dome linked to climate change that saw hot air trapped by high pressure fronts over western Canada and United States, a heat wave that claimed hundreds of lives, experts said.

Kingston, whose political leanings have swung between the leftist New Democratic Party and the Green Party, said she is considering not voting for the first time ever.

"Everyone is talking about (climate change), but like nothing ever changes. So, it's easy to be disillusioned with politics when nothing changes," she said.

Voting would be "more difficult than usual" because "everything is so crazy right now," she said, adding that her post-traumatic stress complicates every little task.

Kingston now lives with her daughter in a tent in a friend's yard, and survives on government food stamps.

"I'm not like angry. I'm more (feeling) disconnected than anything," she said.

Kingston said she's grateful for the help she received in securing unemployment insurance from the constituency office of her local Conservative MP, Brad Vis.

Nevertheless she won't support the Tories in this election due to the party's weaker climate plan.

For the ruling Liberals to hold an election "after the summer that British Columbia just had is a betrayal to the residents that I represent," said Vis, who is campaigning for re-election.

Hundreds of displaced locals "are looking for a place to live this winter" and don't even know how they're going to be able to cast a ballot on September 20, Vis told AFP.

Elections Canada said it is working with local authorities to make sure people can vote and encourages them to do so by mail.

- 'Some kind of hate against B.C.' -

Fire evacuee Neil Dycke has been staying in a motel in Kamloops, about 170 kilometers northeast of Lytton, since the fire destroyed his town.

"You can't blame the politicians" for the wildfires, Dycke said, adding no one could have predicted the fire devastation.

"It's like someone has some kind of hate against B.C., you know... because there is an awful lot of fires this year, way more than normally and close to towns too."

Another fire evacuee, Christine Abbott, 56, chokes back tears as she remembers the home she had lived in since 2012 with her husband Vince.

The home, destroyed by the fire, had belonged to her father-in-law.

"The people who are in leadership have to care about the people and I don't think that's what's going on," she said, sitting on a folding chair outside her camper, parked a short distance from Lytton.

As for Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, "he's too busy for us," so for the first time ever "I might be too busy to vote," she said.

ast/amc/ch

VINCE HOLDING


Related Links
Forest and Wild Fires - News, Science and Technology


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California burning: Wildfires heat up governor recall vote
South Lake Tahoe, United States (AFP) Sept 13, 2021
California is burning. Wildfires are tearing through the US state at an alarming rate and heating up the vote on recalling the embattled governor. Democrat Gavin Newsom's detractors blame him for all of California's ills: from the housing crisis to the march of Covid-19. And the record-breaking fire season - shaping up to be the worst ever - is another stick with which to beat him. "This is about the failure of government to do the most basic things, like manage our forests," Republican c ... read more

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