Medicine Hat News

Soldiers arrive in flooded B.C. communitie­s

-

VANCOUVER Dozens of members of the Canadian Armed Forces have begun to arrive in communitie­s ravaged by flooding in British Columbia, giving relief to emergency workers, volunteers and residents who have worked tirelessly to protect homes and businesses from further damage.

Forty-four military personnel arrived Friday at the Okanagan Similkamee­n’s emergency operations centre in Penticton, said John Davies, field operations incident commander for the emergency operations centre.

“We took them up to Twin Lakes and they are adding some bags and fixing up the gabions in that area to try and hold back the increasing water level within Twin Lakes,” Davies said.

Frances Maika, spokeswoma­n for the Regional District of Kootenay Boundary, said the arrival of about 12 members of the military to help with sandbaggin­g was a huge morale booster for the overwhelme­d residents of Grand Forks.

“When you have children and elderly people sandbaggin­g who are exhausted, to see 12 big guys show up who are fresh and have a lot of endurance, that’s a good thing,” she said.

The Central Okanagan Regional District said 45 soldiers were working to protect a West Kelowna neighbourh­ood threatened by rising water levels from Okanagan Lake.

About 300 soldiers arrived in B.C. from Edmonton on Thursday in response to a provincial request for federal assistance, as about 4,500 people have been forced from their homes by flooding and a further 7,000 have been told to be ready to leave on short notice.

Heavy rain in southern British Columbia has eased but concerns about flooding remain high in dozens of communitie­s from the Fraser Valley east to Alberta.

Environmen­t Canada has lifted a special weather statement that forecast up to 40 millimetre­s of rain for the Boundary and Similkamee­n regions, which were already coping with thousands of evacuation­s caused by rivers swollen from snowmelt after recent hot weather.

Despite the improved conditions, flood warnings were posted Friday for the Salmon River near Falkland and Salmon Arm, as well as the Slocan River just north of Castlegar in the same area where more than 60 properties were placed on evacuation alert on Thursday.

Flood warnings remained in effect for the Granby, Kettle and West Kettle rivers affecting communitie­s that included Grand Forks, which saw flooding last week as water reached historical­ly high levels.

Those rivers are expected to peak by midday Saturday, Maika said.

“We were looking (Thursday) night at two alternativ­es ... severe flooding or catastroph­ic flooding,” Maika said.

“It looks like, from the forecast right now, that severe flooding is our option.”

Once the waters peak, Maika said there’s concern eroded riverbanks that have been supported by the raging waters could begin to collapse as the rivers recede.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/JONATHAN HAYWARD ?? Resident Kyle Piper carries his bike from his house through the floodwater­s in Grand Forks, B.C. on Thursday.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/JONATHAN HAYWARD Resident Kyle Piper carries his bike from his house through the floodwater­s in Grand Forks, B.C. on Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada