Times Colonist

Manitoba floods force dozens out of homes

- STEVE LAMBERT

STUARTBURN, Man. — Dozens more homes in a rural stretch of southeaste­rn Manitoba were evacuated Wednesday after heavy rain flooded farmland and submerged roads.

“All of our north-south roads are washed out,” said David Kiansky, reeve of the Rural Municipali­ty of Stuartburn, a sprawling area of farms and small communitie­s 90 kilometres southeast of Winnipeg with about 1,600 residents.

“We’ve got tube-diking going on … and we are going to try to save our town here.”

The region was hit with about 150 millimetre­s of rain in recent days. A handful of homes had water inside by Monday night.

As the rain continued through Tuesday and into Wednesday, water on the land washed over roadways and the Rat River rose. A bridge over the river was under threat and was likely to soon be out of commission, Kiansky said.

With road access to homes being cut off, the municipali­ty decided to get people out of the hardest-hit areas while they could. More than 80 homes were vacated.

“It’s an unbelievab­le amount of water … and it’s running hard. It’s running fast,” Manitoba Infrastruc­ture Minister Ron Schuler said while touring the area Wednesday.

Evacuees who could not stay with family members were directed to hotels in nearby communitie­s. The province brought in three trailers with tube dikes and other equipment, and had staff on site to look at options such as making cuts in roadways to drain water.

The Rural Municipali­ty of Piney, to the east, also declared a state of emergency and was working to protect roads.

“Our efforts are focused on saving roads that are still passable at the moment. If a road is currently washed out, the R.M. has not prioritize­d these roads since our focus is on saving existing ones,” read a message posted on the municipali­ty’s website.

The province will talk with municipal officials about financial assistance after the flood threat has subsided, Schuler said.

Kiansky said the one bit of good news was the weather forecast. It called for only a few showers followed by several days of sunshine.

“The sun is finally out, so maybe there’s light at the end of the tunnel.”

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