Yeah, everyone has that suspicion, and they'd be wrong 9 times out of 10.....Since there seems to be a strong suspicion it may have been caused by a passing train,
And even the ONE time they were right, it wasn't by a train but another department was responsible. In 2015, there was a big fire on the far side of the river from Lytton that ate up a lot of acres. CN was responsible, but it was track maintainers who couldn't control their wielding and/or grinding and let embers float around into the bushes. Courts found CN responsible and had to pay $16 million; mostly going to the Crown because it happened just outside of the reservations and didn't damage their land as much.
Since then, it's become a 'meme' to blame the railway for all the fires that happen in the Interior. Especially during the Elephant Hill fires around the Ashcroft and Cache Creek area. In fact there was an online campaign to blame the railway, going as far as LIE about the origins of the fire; saying it was sparks from the train that caused it. When in fact the fire came from the top of the hills (away from the rails) and moved downward toward the river where the rails lay, not the other way around. After numerous investigations, they discovered the true cause of the fire was a cigarette butt from a trailer park, on reservation land, of the very tribe that wanted to blame the railway in the first place.
And I'm seeing the same thing currently with Lytton.... and so far these "witnesses" either didn't understand what they saw, or they are lying hoping for a better payout. Those witnesses "claimed" they saw a train use it's air-brakes...I'll dispel that right now...(coming from a "foamer-friend" who knows about these things; *nudge*)
First off, CN and CP share their tracks to help the flow of traffic coming in and out of Vancouver better. All southbound traffic is handled by CN, while Northbound traffic is handled by CP. So going south on the CN side towards Vancouver, track speed through the area is 25mph, a bit above driving through a school zone. And the grade of the hills in the area is gradual, almost flat. Where would it make sense to use a train-brake on the entire train, going that slow? When all you really need to do is throttle off and the whole thing would drop like a rock.....that's the CN track along the outside of the village, away from the initial source of the fire which some said happened on the southeast side of town, closer to the CP track,...but.....
On the CP side, all train traffic goes northward toward Kamloops, so the trains coming up from Vancouver and through Boston Bar to Lytton is one big gradual hill upwards. Again, why would anyone use a brake to stop going uphill? 10,000+ tons of weight being dragged uphill, and they had to take a brake to stop? First off you're not even going at track speed in the first place! People making such accusations were definitely not physics majors, not that you'd have to be to know how trains operate.
Now I'm not saying it's impossible that a train caused this. At the end of this all, we are talking 'metal on metal' anyways; sparks do happen. But what I am saying is that a multi-national, multi-billion dollar corporation is an easy target in times like this, and pays a lot more than any government relief package would. And if everyone is jumping on the 'meme' of "oh oh oh I saw a train use it's brakes! I was actually close enough to see the brake pads push against the wheel and saw the sparks shoot everywhere!".....yeah, I call bullshit....
FUN FACT:...there were numerous forest fires in the immediate region of Lytton weeks prior to this disaster, far from the rails; but within the town's limits. CP's tracks were barely damaged upon first inspection (according to my "foamer-friend") which could imply that the rails were not the source of the fire that destroyed the town.....
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