Calgary Herald

Only half of flood-prevention cash spent

Federal program hit by scheduling issues, hurdles with Quebec, First Nations

- JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA The federal government had trouble spending half of the $184 million earmarked over the last few years to prevent flood damage in Canadian communitie­s, an internal evaluation has found.

The National Disaster Mitigation Program’s effectiven­ess was hindered by scheduling issues that led to delays, the lack of an agreement with Quebec and additional hurdles for First Nations, says the newly released evaluation report.

According to government data, 108 of the 170 major disasters between 2008 and 2018 were floods, causing billions of dollars in damage.

Eighty per cent of Canadian cities are built on flood plains, the report notes. “With climate change, recovery costs for flood disasters will continue to increase.”

The mitigation program, created in 2015, funded 363 projects in 117 communitie­s — mainly flood mapping and structural improvemen­ts to lessen the effects of rising waters. About $95 million went to these projects, but another $89 million in earmarked funding was not allocated.

“Administra­tive requiremen­ts and time limits for structural projects were seen as barriers,” the report says.

There was little uptake of the program in the first two years, as timing of the launch did not align with provincial budget cycles, meaning provinces could not provide the needed matching funds.

In addition, provinces and territorie­s had expected a program to address a wider range of hazards, and therefore may have had to modify projects to match the program’s tight focus on flood mitigation. That focus was considered important given the interplay between disasters.

“When there are forest fires, we know that we’re going to get more floods in coming years,” said one person interviewe­d by the evaluation team.

Since applicatio­ns had to be made through provincial or territoria­l government­s, First Nation communitie­s “faced additional barriers,” given the federal responsibi­lity for on-reserve communitie­s.

Other problems included “complex and burdensome” administra­tion of the funding program, long forms to complete, and significan­t staffing turnover in the regions and at Public Safety Canada headquarte­rs during the early stages.

The program managers accepted the evaluation’s recommenda­tions and committed to making changes.

Five years ago, Canada was the only G7 country with no residentia­l insurance coverage for overland flooding, as existing flood maps were outdated, the report notes. The disaster mitigation program was set up, in part, to undertake the necessary assessment­s and mapping, and the insurance industry has begun to use newly created maps.

“However, at present, affordable overland flood insurance is not available to all affected communitie­s across Canada,” the report says.

Government­s, homeowners, the private sector, academia and non-government­al organizati­ons all have roles to play in reducing the burden on government­s related to disaster recovery, the reviewers say.

They advocate steps such as: Preventing land developmen­t in flood-prone areas through reliance on the program’s risk assessment­s and mapping;

Flood-proofing properties with appropriat­e window wells, downspouts and sump pumps.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES ?? About $95 million of federal funding went to flood mitigation projects in the country, but another $89 million in earmarked funding was not allocated.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES About $95 million of federal funding went to flood mitigation projects in the country, but another $89 million in earmarked funding was not allocated.

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