Times Colonist

Homeowners pile sandbags as Okanagan Lake rises

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VANCOUVER — Homeowners are being asked to build nearly one-metre high sandbag barriers to protect their properties from possible flooding caused by rising water levels in Okanagan Lake.

Stacey Harding, risk manager of the Central Okanagan Emergency Centre, said that while cooler temperatur­es have slowed snow melt, rain may bring water into homes.

“What we’re recommendi­ng is that people do take this very seriously and do get their waterfront-protection measures in,” he said Tuesday.

The Central Okanagan Regional District said crews in the Kelowna area are making plans to deploy flood-protection measures.

Since Monday, the lake has risen more than 2.5 centimetre­s, the district said in its daily update on flooding conditions across the region.

“Residents in Kelowna neighbourh­oods between William R. Bennett Bridge and Kelowna General Hospital might see work crews installing flood protection measures on the beach along the lakeshore starting [Tuesday],” the statement said.

The regional district planned to use various measures, including bladder dams and sandbags, along the nearly twokilomet­re stretch of waterfront just south of the Bennett Bridge.

Lake levels have reached 342.7 metres and flood protection measures in two parks in West Kelowna were underway, while other barriers had been set up in West Kelowna and along Bellevue Creek, in Kelowna’s south end, the district said.

“If water reaches the 343-metre level, low lying areas adjacent to the lake will flood and creeks such as Mission and Mill will begin to backflow, causing them to potentiall­y spill their banks,” a district statement warned Monday.

Recent rains and cool weather mean heavy snowpacks haven’t melted in the hills around the Central Okanagan, but Environmen­t Canada is forecastin­g several days of warm weather ahead for the Interior, with temperatur­es expected to reach 27 C by early next week.

“With water levels at record highs and snow remaining in the high-elevation watersheds, the potential for flooding due to rain, wind or warm temperatur­es is still a risk,” the district said.

The Columbia Shuswap Regional District said an evacuation order for 11 of 13 properties near Tappen had been lifted, but remained in effect for two homes, including one belonging to 75-year-old Roy Sharp, who vanished May 6 when a mudslide hit.

Evacuation orders were also lifted for 17 properties along the west side of Okanagan Lake following a minor slide on Saturday, but the Central Okanagan Regional District said about 400 people across the region were still out of their homes in other areas.

In northeaste­rn B.C., the River Forecast Centre downgraded a flood warning to a flood watch on the Beatton River near Fort St. John, and levels in other waterways through the area were also forecast to continue receding this week.

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