New Brunswick vows aid for flood victims
FREDERICTON — The New Brunswick government will compensate cottage owners whose properties were damaged by record-breaking flooding, while also requiring people with waterfront properties to develop plans to mitigate against future floods.
Environment and Local Government Minister Andrew Harvey announced the special, onetime payment in Fredericton on Wednesday, weeks after floodwaters first swept through several communities along the Saint John River causing extensive damage to primary and recreational homes.
The river — swollen by heavy rains and snow melt — swamped homes throughout the region and caused some cottages to collapse, with some even floating off their foundations.
“Providing assistance to recreational property owners will ensure potential health and safety risks are removed and the natural environment in these communities is restored,” Harvey said at a briefing Wednesday.
“We can’t leave properties affected with contaminants or garbage, furniture [and] appliances that washed up on people’s properties. We need to have this program so that people can clean up their own properties.”
Particularly hard hit was the Grand Lake area, where recreational properties were inundated with water and debris was scattered throughout the popular summer vacation spot.
Harvey said cottage owners must apply for the financial relief and that payments will be capped at $6,100 to help clean up their property. The money can be used for labour and contracted cleanup costs. Claims will be assessed by adjusters after property owners register the damage with the province by phone or online.
“There could be 2,000 recreational properties that could be affected by the flooding,” he said, adding that officials don’t yet know how much the new compensation will cost.
The province said it will also require people to submit plans that include new mitigation conditions before permits will be issued under the Watercourse and Wetland Alteration regulation.
Harvey said people wanting to do work on their property must have the permit if within 30 metres of a waterway. This includes new building construction, reconstruction or expansion of existing buildings.
He said the goal is to reduce the likelihood that a building or its contents would be damaged by flood. The fees for permits will be waived.
David Coon, leader of the provincial Green Party, said the province should have gone further in setting down rules to avoid flooding in the future. He said the province wasn’t strict enough in the past decade in preventing building close to the water and cutting down vegetation and trees near the water.
The Green leader is also looking for provincial regulations that will limit new construction in flood plains.