Times Colonist

Quebec officials on high alert for overflows with rain, spring thaw

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MONTREAL — Rainfall in southweste­rn Quebec and warmer weather expected later this week have officials keeping close tabs on potential springtime flooding in different parts of the province, civil authoritie­s said Monday.

The Hydro-Météo monitoring service said water levels were particular­ly high in parts of the Eastern Townships, the Outaouais area near Ottawa and the region just south of Montreal.

Officials were also keeping tabs on Quebec City and the Beauce region southwest of the provincial capital.

Environmen­t Canada said between 25 and 40 millimetre­s of rain was expected to fall through Monday, tracing a route toward the Charlevoix region northeast of Quebec City.

Some people living in towns along the shores of the Chaudière River left their homes as a preventive measure, as did some homeowners in Weedon, roughly 200 kilometres east of Montreal.

Thomas Blanchet, a Quebec civil-security spokesman, said water levels were already high in some places and the ground was already saturated because of rainfall in recent days.

Most areas of the province were either simply under surveillan­ce or were not considered at high risk, but officials were crisscross­ing the province to assess a situation that could change quickly, with 2017’s record-breaking flooding still on their minds.

At the peak of last year’s flooding, water seeped into 5,300 homes in 291 Quebec municipali­ties, forcing 4,000 people to leave their homes.

Blanchet said even an end to the rainfall will not mean an end to the risks — warmer weather will cause remaining snow to melt in parts of the province, leading to further rising waters in some places.

 ?? PAUL CHIASSON, CP ?? The rising Mille Îsles River has prompted street closures in Laval, Que., on the large island just north of Montreal.
PAUL CHIASSON, CP The rising Mille Îsles River has prompted street closures in Laval, Que., on the large island just north of Montreal.

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