The Province

WOOD DEBRIS HAZARD,

‘Anybody going out into the river now is just asking for major trouble’

- LARRY PYNN lpynn@postmedia.com

A relentless torrent of wood debris being swept downstream by the fast-flowing Fraser River is creating severe navigation­al hazards for recreation­al boaters, including in the Strait of Georgia.

Bob Pearson has lived and worked on the Fraser River for 50 years, and owns two commercial marine businesses on Canoe Pass downstream of Ladner.

“It’s unbelievab­le, just solid,” he said Wednesday. “One of my boats had to go over to Active Pass and he said all the way across the Gulf he had to drive half speed to avoid the debris.”

Pearson said he also spoke with a customer from Mayne Island fishing near Active Pass, who reported his outboard motor being destroyed by wood debris. A sandbar in Canoe Pass across from Pearson is amassed with beached wood.

He discourage­d small recreation­al boats from travelling the Fraser River. “The tide is running so hard it never stops. It doesn’t back up, there’s so much water flowing down. Anybody going out into the river now is just asking for major trouble.”

He also urged the province to ease current restrictio­ns on individual­s sawing up logs on beaches, as a way to help reduce the wood-debris problem.

Brian Staines, harbourmas­ter for the Ladner Harbour Authority, said he hired a tugboat operator to remove debris to protect the public wharf at Wellington Point Park on River Road near Westham Island. Half of the Ferry Road boat ramp was closed this week due to debris. Staines said it’s the most wood he’s seen, and predicts it could get worse.

“I’ve never had to have a tugboat guy basically on call for the whole week, running around clearing stuff,” he said. “And it’s just beginning, I think, as far as the amount of stuff coming down.”

Staines also emphasized the risk the debris poses to smaller vessels in the Strait of Georgia. “At night there’s whole trees floating around and you don’t know where they are.”

Alec Finnsson, president of the Mission Harbour

Authority, said the rising waters pick up fallen trees on flooded shorelines and undercut the roots of trees along the riverbanks.

“There’s not many boats out on the river right now because of the high water,” he said. “We’ve seen some pretty big stuff coming down. We’re seeing more debris than 10 years ago.”

The B.C. government operates a debris trap near Agassiz, but refused Postmedia News access to the site, citing flood-related priorities elsewhere in the province. A series of booms extend out into the river to capture wood.

Said Pearson: “That debris trap hardly works at the best of times. When you get issues like this, it’s not going to handle it. It’s impossible

for anyone to deal with.”

The Canadian Coast Guard has also issued a Notice to Shipping warning mariners to exercise caution navigating the lower Fraser due to high-flow conditions. Concerns include: “reduced air draught under bridges, navigation buoys may be unreliable and temporaril­y swept out of advertised positions, an increase in deadheads and floating wood debris, including significan­t changes in channel depths resulting from increased sedimentat­ion and river scour.”

The federal government is out on the river, providing daily new soundings and updates on channel conditions.

Kevin Obermeyer, president and CEO of the

Pacific Pilotage Authority, said large ships are not affected by the wood debris. The river is flowing so quickly at present that scouring of the river bottom is more of an issue than sediment buildup, which is expected to occur closer to July, he said.

Obermeyer commutes aboard the West Coast Express and monitors river conditions from his passenger seat. The timing of the coast guard Notice to Shipping comes much earlier than normal, he noted.

“There’s a lot of debris in the water, and it’s quite large, big logs coming down,” he said. “A small fishing boat with a fibreglass or aluminum hull could well have a problem.”

 ??  ?? Workers use heavy equipment to clear logs from the Fraser River debris trap along the swollen Fraser River near Agassiz on Wednesday. Booms are placed in the river to direct debris flowing in the river into the trap so it can be removed. — THE CANADIAN...
Workers use heavy equipment to clear logs from the Fraser River debris trap along the swollen Fraser River near Agassiz on Wednesday. Booms are placed in the river to direct debris flowing in the river into the trap so it can be removed. — THE CANADIAN...

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