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B.C. wildfire Sunday: Trudeau plans tour of B.C. fire zones

WATCH: This is now the third-worst fire season in B.C. history, and it's still July. Nadia Stewart has more on the most recent evacuation alerts – Jul 30, 2017

REVELSTOKE, B.C. – Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is scheduled to see the effect of British Columbia’s wildfires first hand Monday, as the situation continues to shift.

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Trudeau, Premier John Horgan and several federal cabinet ministers are set to visit Williams Lake, an Interior community where about 10,000 people were forced from their homes as flames threatened to cut access to highways.

The group includes sports minister and Delta MP Carla Qualtrough who has been put in charge of a committee to organize fire recovery efforts.

WATCH: ‘Teach her how to wave with the whole hand unlike her father’: Trudeau

Trudeau and the others will meet with military and RCMP members from a command centre in Williams Lake before visiting the fire centre and getting an aerial tour of the fire zone.

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Residents of Williams Lake have been returning home for the past few days after being ordered to leave more than two weeks ago.

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Others in the region remain out of their homes after a flurry of evacuation orders were issued late Saturday night and early Sunday morning.

WATCH: Latest B.C. wildfire coverage

Seventy-five kilometres south of 100 Mile House, residents of the village of Clinton and surrounding areas were forced from their homes because of the flames were “rapidly moving.”

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The Cariboo Regional District has also issued an expanded evacuation order for the Clisbako area, about 100 kilometres west of Quesnel. It also issued an evacuation alert for a region south of Highway 24, north of the Green Lake area that is under an evacuation order.

Trudeau was in Revelstoke Saturday urging Canadians to donate to the Red Cross to aid in relief efforts for fire-ravaged B.C. communities.

READ MORE: B.C. wildfires map 2017: Current location of wildfires around the province

“I know that once again, as we have in challenges in the past, Canadians will step up, stand together and show their compassion,” Trudeau said.

Officials fear high temperatures and a chance for lightning could increase fire activity.

Environment Canada forecasts rising temperatures up to and above 30 degrees Celsius for the southern Interior in the coming week, and the BC Wildfire Service has said the forests are much more dry than normal.

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