The Telegram (St. John's)

Residents in evacuation zone vow to stay until last minute

- BY GARY KEAN

Last week, Angus Janes decided to disconnect the clotheslin­e stretching from his deck to a birch tree just out past the top of the fence marking his property.

The resident of Pine Tree Drive in Deer Lake was a bit concerned about the eroding riverbank only about eight feet beyond his property boundary.

He didn’t want the sturdy line to be connected if the bank gave way further, lest it rip his deck part along with it.

It was a good idea.

On Monday, that birch tree, along with a few others along the bank, were leaning out toward the Humber River, which has been eating away at its banks along Pine Tree Drive for the last 11 days.

“As long as it stays behind the fence, I’m not worried too much,” Janes said around midday Monday.

The roughly 30-year-old house

Janes and his wife, Shirley, have lived in for the last 21 years is one of the four on Pine Tree Drive that are subject to a voluntary evacuation notice. The two further in the road may be in more peril, but the edge of the bank is creeping closer and closer to their fence.

Still, the couple wasn’t quite

ready to vacate their house just yet.

There was no answer on the doors of the two homes furthest in Pine Tree Drive on the riverbank side Monday. There was no indication those residents have abided by the voluntary evacuation yet, though.

Maxine Hancock was born in a log cabin just up the river and now lives in the first house on the street, where she grew up. She has owned the house since 1974.

She has seen the Humber River high, but has never seen the conditions the area has most recently experience­d.

The water has dropped since early last week, but Hancock is ready to leave if she absolutely has to.

“Right now, I’m not too concerned because everything has stopped and froze up,” she said of the river that was flowing unusually swiftly last week. “I don’t want to go unless I got to.”

The frozen river’s appearance is deceiving, though. The sandy riverbank has continued to erode. It even left one utility pole dangling over the edge in the area where the worst of the landslide has happened so far.

On Monday, a crew erected four new poles on the opposite side of the street so the four on the riverbank side could be removed.

Things are likely to get worse before they get better, cautioned Mayor Dean Ball. The most recent erosion has happened in bitterly cold temperatur­es. He has serious concerns about what might happen Wednesday, when the forecast calls for mild temperatur­es and rain.

“We have to be prepared for what’s about to happen here,” said Ball. “Once this weather starts to turn mild, we are anticipati­ng some larger movements.”

Ball said this situation is going to be an issue for the town and the Pine Tree Drive area’s residents for not just the days, but weeks, to come.

The town, with help from the Canadian Red Cross, has an evacuation centre set up at the Emmanuel Pentecosta­l Church. Clarice Legrow, provincial manager of the Canadian Red Cross, told The Western Star it has registered the neighbourh­ood’s residents and has discussed the importance of preparedne­ss with them, but confirmed none have moved to the evacuation centre.

 ?? GARY KEAN/ THE WESTERN STAR ?? Angus and Shirley Janes, who are among the residents being urged to vacate their houses along the Humber River, pose at the back door of their home on Pine Tree Drive in Deer Lake.
GARY KEAN/ THE WESTERN STAR Angus and Shirley Janes, who are among the residents being urged to vacate their houses along the Humber River, pose at the back door of their home on Pine Tree Drive in Deer Lake.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada