The Guardian (Charlottetown)

‘The threat is not over’

Officials urge caution as waters recede

- BY ALY THOMSON

Officials are issuing a fresh warning to flood-weary New Brunswicke­rs even as the record-breaking floodwater­s that have swamped homes, washed away cottages and submerged dozens of roads begin to retreat.

“The threat is not over,” Greg MacCallum, director of the New Brunswick Emergency Measures Organizati­on, said during a briefing Tuesday.

“It’s not time to let anyone’s guard down,” he said. “It’s still an emergency situation in some areas.”

MacCallum said anxiety is high in the flood zone, but he urged patience and vigilance. The effects of the historic flood could linger for weeks and months.

Although the swollen Saint John River has crested and water levels are receding, the fast-moving, contaminat­ed waters continue to pose a danger.

Geoffrey Downey, spokesman for the EMO, said there is raw sewage and motor oil in the river, animals have likely drowned in it and there have been reports of propane tanks going down the river and dischargin­g their contents.

“There’s any number of contaminan­ts in the river right now,” he said.

Floodwater­s could contain harmful bacteria like salmonella or E. Coli, officials said.

“You need to avoid contact with flood waters,” the province’s chief medical officer of health, Dr. Jennifer Russell, said. “Water contaminat­ed with sewage may carry bacteria that can make propel sick.”

For residents cleaning contaminat­ed areas, she said protective clothing including gloves, masks and boots should be worn and hands should be washed regularly.

Children and pets should not be allowed to play in floodwater, Russell added, and toys submerged in the floodwater should be washed in hot water and disinfecte­d.

Downey said water levels from the swollen Saint John River had decreased Tuesday by about 30 centimetre­s from eight metres to about 7.7 metres in Fredericto­n.

In Saint John, the levels were at about 5.6 metres - a drop of about 10 centimetre­s from Monday.

“I’m hopeful we’re on the way back to normalcy,” Doug Britton, 71, said Tuesday as water crashed over sandbags outside the window in his now-empty basement near Quispamsis, N.B., outside Saint John.

Britton’s hot tub drifted away from under his deck a few days ago, and is now floating metres away. Hundreds of sandbags are lined up against the back of his house.

Britton, who estimates the water level is roughly three metres higher than usual, has been feeding gasoline to four water pumps every hour to ward off floodwater­s from the Kennebecas­is River. He also has to clean debris from the pumps every 15 minutes.

“It’s hard to believe the power of water,” said Britton over the sound of his pumps shooting large streams of water away from his two-level house. “But knock on wood, we might just be able to make it through this.”

A couple whose sandbaglin­ed home is next to a washedout road in Saint John, N.B., had set up a table at the end of their driveway Tuesday to distribute bottled water and snacks to smiling passerby.

In nearby Rothesay, N.B., some residents were forced to park at the end of their flooded street and don hip waders before making the trek in rubber boots to their homes. Ducks were swimming in the front yard of a deserted-looking house on the road that borders the Kennebecas­is River.

Danielle Ring, 23, and her sister Rebecca, 20, were on cleanup duty Tuesday in the flooded front lot of their father’s boat service business, Brothers Cove Ventures, in Saint John, N.B. The sisters were shovelling debris and wading through flood waters to retrieve floating wood pallets and other rubbish.

Dozens of boats had to be moved up towards the street and into neighbouri­ng driveways away from flood waters that inched up hundreds of feet from where the shoreline normally sits.

Danielle Ring said they are exhausted, but are happy the family was spared from more serious damage.

“It’s a lot on the body. You’re using every muscle - lifting, pushing. The sand-bagging was the worst,” said Ring, holding a shovel and wearing hip waders, rubber boots and gloves.

“But this is what you get when you live next to the water. You take that chance.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Danielle Ring, 23, left, and her sister Rebecca, 20, shovel debris out of water that flooded the front driveway of their father’s boat service business in Saint John, N.B., on Tuesday.
CP PHOTO Danielle Ring, 23, left, and her sister Rebecca, 20, shovel debris out of water that flooded the front driveway of their father’s boat service business in Saint John, N.B., on Tuesday.

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