The Commercial Appeal

Some roads reopen in flooded British Columbia

Situation still critical; soldiers arrive to help

- Jim Morris

VANCOUVER, British Columbia – An advance team of Canadian soldiers went to work Thursday, and more were due, as some major highways reopened to limited traffic in British Columbia, but officials said the situation remained critical after floods and mudslides that forced evacuation­s, blocked transporta­tion routes, caused the death of at least one person and killed thousands of farm animals.

Federal Public Safety Minister Bill Blair said the good news is that the significant rainfall has ended and no further major precipitat­ion is expected for the rest of the week.

“The situation remains critical, but there is an improvemen­t,” he said in Ottawa.

British Columbia’s premier, John Horgan, has declared a state of emergency after record rainfall drenched much of the province’s south for more than 48 hours. One person is confirmed dead in a landslide that swept vehicles off a road near Pemberton, and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said the number of people believed to be missing at the site had been raised to four.

The province’s public safety minister, Mike Farnworth, said at an afternoon news conference that the cost of repairing damage to roads, bridges and other infrastruc­ture is “going to be substantia­l.”

“It is far too early at this point to understand what the total damage is going to be,” he said. “The province has the fiscal capacity to be able to rebuild.”

Transporta­tion Minister Rob Fleming said Highway 7, which connects Vancouver to the interior of the province, was reopened to alternatin­g, singlelane traffic. Another major route was expected to be opened by the weekend.

Other highways could take months to repair, Fleming said.

Federal Transport Minister Omar Alghabra said talks were underway with Canadian and U.S. border officials to reach an interim agreement to allow cargo trucks to detour through border crossings to reach their destinatio­ns.

Canadian Defense Minister Anita Anand said 120 soldiers would arrive in British Columbia late Thursday to join a nine-member team from the Edmonton-based 3 Canadian Division Immediate Response Unit that arrived a day earlier.

An additional 160 military personnel were preparing to leave Edmonton with a convoy of military vehicles and equipment, she said.

Farnworth said the soldiers will assist with evacuation efforts, help with logistics and operate equipment.

About 17,000 people remain out of their homes, with 6,900 properties under evacuation order, he said.

The weekend storm left all major routes between the Lower Mainland of British Columbia and the interior of the province cut by washouts, flooding or landslides.

Lana Popham, the province’s agricultur­e minister, said residents shouldn’t worry about food shortages.

“Our food is secure. We’re just re-gigging routes to get it to folks,” she said. “We’re definitely not going to run out of food.”

 ?? LARS HAGBERG/THE CANADIAN PRESS VIA AP ?? Members of the military prepare a plane in Trenton, Ontario, to carry personnel and helicopter­s to help in British Columbia.
LARS HAGBERG/THE CANADIAN PRESS VIA AP Members of the military prepare a plane in Trenton, Ontario, to carry personnel and helicopter­s to help in British Columbia.

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