Times Colonist

Merritt joins cities hit by flooding

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VANCOUVER — Waterways in the Nicola Valley, near Merritt, are the latest to burst their banks, forcing evacuation­s and alerts, as flooding wreaks havoc across the southern Interior.

Emergency officials with the Upper Nicola Indian Band, about 30 kilometres northeast of Merritt, ordered the evacuation of seven more homes on Wednesday, in addition to the 11 homes evacuated this month.

A further 28 homes and four recreation­al vehicle parks remained on evacuation alert in the same area, while the City of Merritt was also coping with high water as the Nicola River has breached its banks.

A city official said a few streets are flooded, but no homes have been damaged. She expected it could be a week before conditions dry up.

Close to Kamloops, rising waters of Campbell Creek washed away a trail in the B.C. Wildlife Park and forced park officials to move mountain goats to a safer enclosure.

Emergency officials in the Okanagan said record-high water levels in surroundin­g lakes, an abundance of snow still to melt and unpredicta­ble weather mean flood conditions in the region will likely last well into June.

The Central Okanagan Regional District said levels of Okanagan Lake rose more than three centimetre­s Tuesday and lakeside residents were urged to prepare for high water.

The district continued to set up dams and sandbags to protect parts of flood-threatened downtown Kelowna.

It said the lake sits at 342.74 metres and is rising at a rate of more than three centimetre­s daily. Officials have warned that serious flooding will occur if Okanagan Lake surpasses the 343-metre level.

The district rescinded evacuation orders for all properties affected by flooding on Okanagan Indian Band Reserve No. 7, but it recommende­d residents leave flood preparatio­ns such as sandbags in place.

In its latest flood preparatio­n memo issued Wednesday, the district included specific directions to help residents determine how far flood waters are expected to seep across their properties.

“Use a tape measure to measure an additional 86 centimetre­s vertically above the existing water level [of 342.74 metres]. This will equal 343.6 metres, which includes the projected flood level plus buffer to protect from wave action,” the district advised.

The memo advised homeowners to mark the level against something stationary such as a tree, fence or wall and to build flood protection measures including sandbag walls, up to that height.

As lake levels creep upward, officials in Kamloops are keeping watch over two powerful rivers as Environmen­t Canada forecasts rising temperatur­es this weekend during heavier-than-normal snowpacks on area mountains.

“We still have over 90 to 95 per cent of our high-elevation snowpacks in the North and South Thompson drainages,” said Emergency Operations Centre head Dan Sutherland. “We are watching it very, very closely,”

Provincial disaster financial assistance has now been authorized for North Okanagan Regional District properties affected by flooding. Homeowners who do not have flood insurance may submit a claim for flood losses on or before the Aug. 5 deadline.

 ??  ?? Employees of the B.C. Wildfire Service help set up aqua dams at Pritchard Park in West Kelowna. Crews are taking flood-protection measures against rising lake levels at various sites in the Okanagan and Nicola valleys.
Employees of the B.C. Wildfire Service help set up aqua dams at Pritchard Park in West Kelowna. Crews are taking flood-protection measures against rising lake levels at various sites in the Okanagan and Nicola valleys.

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