The Prince George Citizen

Hot weather could cause more flood woes in B.C.

- Citizen news service

VANCOUVER — An emergency operations official in southern British Columbia says a forecast of warm weather has residents bracing for the possibilit­y of more flooding from melting snow while at least one town starts bailing out.

Damage from torrential rain has already had a “catastroph­ic” impact on the community of Grand Forks, said Chris Marsh of the Regional District of Kootenay Boundary.

“The effects from this event will be long lasting,” said Marsh.

“We’re talking years and years and million of dollars.”

Nearly 2,800 residents have been forced out of their homes, Marsh said Friday, adding rescue efforts have come with some challenges.

“We have a lot of people who refused to leave under order and we had to put a lot of our rescue resources into going back into rescuing these people,” he said.

On Thursday, two days of heavy rain pushed the Kettle, West Kettle and Granby rivers to levels higher than those recorded during devastatin­g floods 70 years ago while smaller creeks had record-high flows, Marsh said.

A dyke also breached in one neighbourh­ood, knocking out power to much of the downtown area in Grand Forks, he said.

Dan Derby, the regional fire rescue deputy chief, said getting people back into their homes as quickly as possible is one of the top priorities following assessment of infrastruc­ture such as roads and bridges.

David Campbell, head of the B.C. River Forecast Centre, said an extended period of dry weather is expected across the province next week.

The temperatur­e over the past three weeks has been about five degrees above normal in the Interior, and that could mean more trouble for parts of southeast B.C., Campbell said on a conference call from Victoria.

“We’re really racking up to a month of hot weather by the end of next week and that’s driven rivers up much, much earlier than normal.”

The Regional District of Kootenay Boundary said nearly 1,400 properties were ordered evacuated, with waters rising so quickly that many people were trapped in their homes in Grand Forks.

Chris Duffy, executive director of programs with Emergency Management BC, said 31 evacuation orders have been issued across the province, affecting 1,993 homes. Evacuation alerts, warning residents they may have to leave with little notice, are in place for 930 residences.

Duffy said 23 states of local emergency were also in effect and sandbag machines were brought in from Saskatchew­an while firefighte­rs were deployed to assist with sandbaggin­g in various communitie­s.

People should stay away from fast-moving water and not drive through areas that are flooded, he said.

“We encourage local government­s and First Nations right now to be looking at activating their operation centres. As we start to consider the lower Fraser (River) we’re in dialogue with those communitie­s so we can get some advance planning and communicat­ions in place.”

The River Forecast Centre said flood warnings are in effect on waterways throughout the Okanagan and Boundary regions, along the Canada-U.S. border, while flood watches are posted for many other rivers and streams, including the Similkamee­n and Tulameen rivers west of Grand Forks.

Parts of the town of Osoyoos were ordered evacuated Thursday and flooding was also reported in Keremeos, Cawston and Okanagan Falls.

Osoyoos declared a state of local emergency and ordered homeowners with flooded basements to stop pumping the water back into the town’s sewer system.

“The act of causing this water to enter the sewer system in current conditions is causing pump infrastruc­ture to function beyond capacity, which may result in a breakdown of the town sewer management system,” the town said in a news release.

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 ?? REGIONAL DISTRICT OF KOOTENAY BOUNDARY HANDOUT PHOTO ?? Flooding is seen along the Kettle River in Almond Gardens, B.C., in this undated handout photo.
REGIONAL DISTRICT OF KOOTENAY BOUNDARY HANDOUT PHOTO Flooding is seen along the Kettle River in Almond Gardens, B.C., in this undated handout photo.

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