Medicine Hat News

Canadian troops sent to B.C. to battle floods

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GRAND FORKS, B.C. The first wave of 300 Canadian military personnel is being sent to British Columbia to help communitie­s overwhelme­d by floodwater­s as parts of the province are expected to be hit with heavy rain following snowmelt from unseasonab­ly warm weather.

The Canadian Armed Forces said staff from Joint Task Force Pacific and personnel from the 3rd Canadian Division based in Edmonton were to establish themselves in Vernon on Thursday before being deployed to areas affected by flooding including Grand Forks.

Officials in the southern Interior city say thundersto­rms are expected to bring a second round of high water.

Chris Marsh of the Regional District of Kootenay Boundary said while water levels in the Granby, Kettle, and West Kettle rivers ebbed since a flood last week, the Kettle River rose 20 to 22 centimetre­s on Thursday and all three were dangerousl­y high.

“They remain very, very high and of course the threat is that they’ll continue to rise until Saturday,” Marsh said.

Across the province, about 4,500 people have been forced out of their homes while 7,000 residents have been placed on evacuation alert as the threat of flooding rises, said Chris Duffy, executive director of Emergency Management BC.

Weather will continue to be a big factor into next week, said David Campbell, head of the province’s River Forecast Centre.

“The prolonged nature and the severity of the temperatur­es that we’ve seen is unpreceden­ted for this time of year and that’s leading to flows that we have not seen in many decades,” he said, adding weather in the southern parts of the province is the main concern in the short term.

Rain expected Thursday night and into Friday will push the risk of extreme flooding through the Similkamee­n, Okanagan, Shuswap and Boundary regions, he said.

Ralph Goodale, the federal minister of public safety and emergency preparedne­ss, said in a news release that members of the Armed Forces will help with evacuation­s, sandbaggin­g and property protection.

B.C. Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth said military personnel will be deployed to the areas of greatest need, including in the southern Interior.

Frances Maika, corporate communicat­ions officer at the Regional District of Kootenay Boundary, said some members of the Armed Forces could be put to work in Grand Forks as another surge of water was expected.

Environmen­t Canada issued special weather statements Thursday, saying as much as 40 millimetre­s of rain could fall in the area by late Saturday.

“Last week, the Granby station picked up 52 millimetre­s of rain that was not in the forecast,” Maika said. “Sometimes you can get these isolated showers, and if we get that, the river forecast model completely changes.”

Celinda Galloway was told to leave her home in the Grand Forks neighbourh­ood of Ruckle, but she said she and her husband Ryan along with about 20 other residents are staying put in an effort to save their homes.

“Obviously they want us out,” she said. “Our homes are salvageabl­e.”

Galloway said they built a berm of dirt and sandbags to protect their home, adding they’ve had some mud and water seep into their basement but damage has otherwise been minimal.

“If we left, nobody would have pumped our basement out.”

Maika said she understand­s residents’ frustratio­n in the Ruckle neighbourh­ood but safety is the main priority.

“It’s a low elevation area that was at definite risk of harm coming to people who remained there,” she said.

The Regional District of Kootenay Boundary gave residents a 12-hour window to return to their homes to pick up any valuables left behind on Thursday.

A news release from the district says properties along the banks of the surging Kettle River were at risk, and more evacuation orders were possible.

School District 51, which operates eight elementary schools, two secondary schools and a developmen­t centre in the Boundary region, closed all schools Thursday because of the potential for more flooding.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/JONATH AN HAYWARD ?? Resident Lars Androsoff carries his friend's guitars as he walks through the floodwater­s in Grand Forks, B.C., on Thursday.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/JONATH AN HAYWARD Resident Lars Androsoff carries his friend's guitars as he walks through the floodwater­s in Grand Forks, B.C., on Thursday.

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