A call from the University of British Columbia’s Okanagan campus is asking for residents impacted by wildfires and flooding to speak with them.
Carolyn Szostack, associate professor of psychology, said the new study will be looking into residents’ well-being and how living in the Interior could create some worry, as natural disasters continue to escalate each year.
Szostack said they’re focusing on the Okanagan-Similkameen area — an area hit hard by wildfires last year, including Keremeos, Cawston, Hedley and Princeton.
WATCH: Researchers gather to study lingering effects of wildfire smoke
With one of B.C.’s worst wildfire seasons behind us, potential flooding is also on the way as spring creeps up.
“The waters will be probably rising again, so are they more nervous about it now than they were?” Szostack said. That’s one of the things she says the study will investigate.
She adds they’ll be sharing their research. Szostack said they’ll conduct follow-up interviews with those who reach out. That, she said, will be followed by possible town hall meetings to help create strategies and plans to help better the impacted communities.