The Niagara Falls Review

Ontario appoints adviser on flooding

Province reaches out to Ottawa, Quebec about Ottawa River system management

- ALLISON JONES

Ontario has appointed a special adviser on flooding to recommend ways the province can reduce the impacts of floods and help communitie­s deal with them.

Doug McNeil is a former Manitoba deputy minister of infrastruc­ture and transporta­tion and held senior positions at the Manitoba Floodway Authority. He will be paid up to $60,000 and will be expected to deliver a report and recommenda­tions in the fall.

Natural Resources Minister John Yakabuski said McNeil will assess the roles of government­s and agencies involved in flood management and highlight any opportunit­ies for improvemen­t.

“He’s going to review all of the operations from the Ontario perspectiv­e ... and also look at ways, anything we can do to make ourselves more resilient or better prepared for future flooding,” Yakabuski said in an interview.

The province also recently establishe­d a task force on flooding following high water levels this spring in Muskoka and eastern Ontario. Yakabuski said McNeil will take the informatio­n learned through the task force’s work and public meetings and incorporat­e it into his review.

Yakabuski has also sent a letter to the federal and Quebec environmen­t ministers, asking for their help in launching an independen­t review of how the Ottawa River system is managed.

“After seeing the impacts of the flooding first-hand, it is clear to me that immediate action is necessary to help protect residents living along the Ottawa River system from future flood events,” he wrote.

“We need to learn everything we can from the flooding that occurred this spring and use that knowledge to find ways to prevent such devastatin­g impacts from happening in the future.”

Yakabuski also announced that property owners can apply online for a work permit to repair eroded shorelines. The government recently launched a $1million pilot project to help communitie­s protect against effects of extreme weather.

The funds would allow municipali­ties to make their infrastruc­ture more resilient to extreme weather, with measures such as raising roads, improving the footing of bridges or increasing the size of catch basins.

Earlier this year, the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government cut conservati­on authoritie­s’ funding for flood management in half. Conservati­on authoritie­s forecast flooding and issue warnings, monitor stream flow, regulate developmen­t activities in flood plains, educate the public about flooding and protect natural cover that helps reduce the impacts of flooding.

Ontario had given $7.4 million to the conservati­on authoritie­s for that work, but they say that has been reduced by 50 per cent.

The government has said it is trying to eliminate the deficit — currently at $11.7 billion — and has asked conservati­on authoritie­s to focus on their core mandate, which includes flood control.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? An Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources Fire Ranger carries sandbags to fortify a wall keeping floodwater­s at bay along Alexander Street in Pembroke, Ont., in May.
JUSTIN TANG THE CANADIAN PRESS An Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources Fire Ranger carries sandbags to fortify a wall keeping floodwater­s at bay along Alexander Street in Pembroke, Ont., in May.
 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Soldiers work to hold back floodwater­s on the Ottawa River in Cumberland, Ont., in April.
SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS Soldiers work to hold back floodwater­s on the Ottawa River in Cumberland, Ont., in April.

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