Journal Pioneer

Flooding misery

Residents awash in frustratio­n over flooding of local road

- BY DESIREE ANSTEY

Heavy rain and melting snow walloped parts of P.E.I., including a section of the Center Line Road that connects St. Lawrence to Alma on Saturday morning.

Melanie Doucette watched anxiously as the body of water, near her home, rose.

It was only four years ago that her young family scrambled to safety after the same nearby stream surrounded them.

“It’s always a big scare when it starts to heavy rain,” she said. “In December 2014 we had seven feet of water in our home and covering our vehicles. The Department of Transporta­tion had to rescue us and I had an 11-week-old baby. It was a very scary and uncertain time.” Doucette compared the aftermath of the flood to that of a fire.

“It was the same as if a fire had gutted part of our home. It was devastatin­g. But hopefully it doesn’t happen again.” The nearby bridge was closed on Saturday around 8.30 a.m., due to flooding and was later reopened by highway maintenanc­e at 6.30 p.m.

Sheila Tremblay, another Center Line Road resident, said traffic came to a stop because of the flooding. As a result, she was forced to close her business for the day.

“I live very close to the bridge and my business is run from out of my home, so anyone coming from the highway can’t get to me,” she said.

“The water was gushing across the bridge, and our ditch filled right to the top. All the ditches down the road were overflowin­g.”

To add to Tremblay’s frustratio­n,

Center Line Road is not paved.

“This is 2018, there shouldn’t be any dirt roads. This is probably the third or fourth time the road has been fixed. I’ve had my business for (nearly) six years and it’s my only source of income. This morning I had three people cancel because they couldn’t cross the bridge.”

She said that with the bridge down she is effectivel­y trapped. “My husband and I tried to leave by taking the other way out, but I didn’t feel comfortabl­e because the road was so piled up with ice. I told my husband to turnaround and just go back home.”

West Prince experience­d flooding after its brief taste of spring began to disappear Saturday afternoon, thanks to 40 millimetre­s of rainfall that brought winter back with it. Freezing rain followed in the evening and overnight causing several power outages, while early morning risers on Sunday were greeted to light snow flurries.

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO/ JENN MURPHY ?? Traffic is brought to a stop after water gushes across the bridge on Center Line Road.
SUBMITTED PHOTO/ JENN MURPHY Traffic is brought to a stop after water gushes across the bridge on Center Line Road.
 ?? ERIC MCCARTHY/ JOURNAL PIONEER ?? Onlookers stop to snap up photos of Bloomfield Park that was flooded on Saturday as a result of heavy rain and melting snow. The water is coming from Carruther’s Brook. It runs right through the park, and then crosses under Highway Two into the Mill...
ERIC MCCARTHY/ JOURNAL PIONEER Onlookers stop to snap up photos of Bloomfield Park that was flooded on Saturday as a result of heavy rain and melting snow. The water is coming from Carruther’s Brook. It runs right through the park, and then crosses under Highway Two into the Mill...

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