Times Colonist

Warm, dry spell eases Manitoba flood

- STEVE LAMBERT

— Days of warm, dry weather appear to be helping the fight against flooding in Manitoba.

The Fisher River, which has spilled its banks and forced some 1,400 people from the Peguis First Nation to leave their homes, is at or near its peak and will gradually drop to within its banks next week, the province’s top flood forecaster said Thursday.

“It could go up, down a few centimetre­s … it’s going to stay there a few more days,” said Fisaha Unduche, executive director of hydrologic forecastin­g and water management for the Manitoba government

“It’s going to be a very gradual recession. That’s why it will take another five to seven days before it comes to the banks.”

There is no major precipitat­ion in the forecast for the next two weeks, which should allow rivers and tributarie­s to drop. Some showers forecast for Sunday are not expected to be enough to have any effect, Unduche said.

The news was welcomed by Chris Ewan, mayor of the Rural Municipali­ty of Ritchot, which covers a large area along the Red River south of Winnipeg.

The river has become a lake in many areas, flooding farmland and roads. Communitie­s in the Red River Valley are protected by dikes and diversion channels, but sandbaggin­g efforts have been underway to offer more protection to outlying properties. “The amount of water we’re dealing with right now is unsustaina­ble,” Ewan said.

The municipal government has served 180 homes with evacuation notices and about one-third of the people have left. More than 20 roads are closed in the region.

Further south, a section of the main highway between Winnipeg and the United States border remained closed Thursday, which forced motorists to take a long detour to the west.

The Red is expected to peak next week, but at a slightly lower level than predicted a week ago. That should allow communitie­s to keep portions of their dikes open so they can maintain road access to the outside world, officials said.

Peguis First Nation had requested a helicopter earlier in the week, theprovinc­ial government said, but was turned down in part because the community still had road access.

“We feel that, if there’s anything in the future … where they can’t get out of their communitie­s, then we’ll look at an option like that,” Transporta­tion Minister Doyle Piwniuk said. Operating a helicopter costs about $10,000 an hour, he later added.

Piwniuk’s press secretary later clarified the minister’s remarks. The request was to have a helicopter stationed in Peguis on standby for any potential medical evacuation­s, Miranda Dube said.

“Shared Health, who co-ordinates medevac helicopter services, advised that they would be unable to station a medevac helicopter in the community, as it is used regularly across the province for immediate emergent medical response, but would definitely provide services if an emergency occurred in the community,” she wrote in an email.

Piwniuk said he and Premier Heather Stefanson visited Peguis this week, but were unable to get as far as the band office.

 ?? DAVID LIPNOWSKI, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Katie Powell, president and founder of Save A Dog Network, brought bags of dog food by canoe to stranded homes during flooding on the Peguis First Nation, Man., on Wednesday.
DAVID LIPNOWSKI, THE CANADIAN PRESS Katie Powell, president and founder of Save A Dog Network, brought bags of dog food by canoe to stranded homes during flooding on the Peguis First Nation, Man., on Wednesday.

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