The Niagara Falls Review

Hundreds of troops deployed to flood zones in Quebec and N.B.

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MONTREAL — Quebec Premier François Legault is visiting flood-damaged regions north of Montreal, as warm temperatur­es and rising water levels threaten to worsen the spring flooding already wreaking havoc across a wide region.

Legault was set to visit a community centre and flooded homes on an island in the Laval region, where Canadian Forces troops are expected to join the efforts to limit the damage.

The city says it could receive another 20 to 40 millimetre­s of rain in the coming days.

Many people across Quebec and New Brunswick have been filling sandbags in an effort to protect their homes.

Officials say water levels are expected to rise in many regions due to warming temperatur­es that contribute to snowmelt and ice movement.

About 200 soldiers started filling sandbags and carrying out evacuation­s in Quebec’s Outaouais and Mauricie regions overnight.

An additional 400 troops were standing ready to deploy there and in Laval.

Urgence Québec says that as of Sunday morning, 980 residences across the province had been flooded and more than 1,200 people had left their homes.

Several major floods have been identified as threatenin­g thousands of Quebecers.

So far one death has been blamed on the high water.

Police say 72-year-old Louise Séguin Lortie died Saturday morning after driving her car into a sinkhole caused by flooding in the Pontiac area, about 30 kilometres northwest of Ottawa.

Some of the worst flooding has been in the Beauce region south of Quebec City, where 883 homes were swamped and 765 people moved to safety.

Meanwhile, about 120 soldiers are being deployed across western New Brunswick to help residents threatened by rising flood waters.

Fifteen communitie­s across New Brunswick have been warned to remain on high alert.

 ?? JACQUES BOISSINOT THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? People are moved to safety by firefighte­rs in Sainte-Marie, Que., on Saturday. The Chaudière River overflowed after heavy rain.
JACQUES BOISSINOT THE CANADIAN PRESS People are moved to safety by firefighte­rs in Sainte-Marie, Que., on Saturday. The Chaudière River overflowed after heavy rain.

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