The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Water levels starting to drop below flood stage

- BY ALEX COOKE

Water levels are starting to drop in flood-stricken New Brunswick, signalling the beginning of the end of the catastroph­ic natural disaster.

New Brunswick Emergency Measures Organizati­on said Saturday that water levels have already fallen below flood stage in many areas, and most affected regions should be under flood stage by Thursday.

While the worst is over, residents and volunteers alike are turning their attention to the debris and damage left by the record-level flooding.

“In terms of the water-level situation, it’s coming back to normal,” said Emergency Measures Organizati­on spokesman Robert Duguay in a phone interview from Fredericto­n.

“It’s more an issue of recovery now.”

Thousands of sandbags need to be disposed of and sodden debris lining communitie­s and homes need to be cleared as water levels continue their much-anticipate­d retreat.

The Canadian Red Cross is offering flood cleanup kits — containing squeegees, sponges, work gloves and other items — to New Brunswicke­rs who can safely return to their homes.

Dunguay said 47 roads across the province remain closed as officials continue to survey roads, culverts and bridges for damage.

“Even if the roads seem to be dry, they still need to be inspected to make sure they’re safe for driving,” he said.

The Jemseg area is the only region where water is expected to remain above flood stage for the rest of the week, with federal data indicating that Jemseg was 1.11 metres above flood stage on Saturday.

Gerald Dykeman, who lives in Jemseg, said he’s never seen anything like it in the 70 years he’s lived there.

While his part of Jemseg was spared from the torrent of water, he said a community of houses and cottages close to nearby Grand Lake were devastated.

“Some of them are off their foundation­s, and others are just gone,” he said, estimating that at least 30 cottages were destroyed in the disaster.

“It’s just unbelievab­le, the damage it did.”

He said many of them were summer homes owned by people in the surroundin­g communitie­s.

Last weekend, the rising water levels were only made worse by tearing winds, whipping up waves more than a metre high.

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