Times Colonist

Ottawa to provide $870M to support B.C. flood, landslide recovery efforts

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VANCOUVER — The federal government is providing $870 million to support recovery efforts after destructiv­e flooding in British Columbia last November, Emergency Preparedne­ss Minister Bill Blair announced Monday.

The money is the first payment of a commitment Ottawa made in the immediate aftermath of the severe weather, with more to come, he said.

“It’s important to get money out as quickly as possible, so that rebuild can begin in earnest and we can help those communitie­s … return to a sense of normalcy,” Blair told a news conference.

His comments came after the fifth and final meeting of a committee made up of B.C. and federal ministers on disaster response and climate resiliency.

The funds are being distribute­d through the disaster financial assistance program.

British Columbia has asked for about $5 billion to help rebuild after the disaster through the program, and provincial Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth said accessing the money can take time, so the advanced payment is important.

He said much of the cash will go toward rebuilding infrastruc­ture, both public and private, that was damaged when recordsett­ing rainfall hit southern B.C. last November.

The so-called atmospheri­c river caused widespread flooding and landslides that inundated farmland and washed out sections of several major highways.

The money will be leveraged to make sure B.C. is rebuilding infrastruc­ture that’s more resilient to the effects of climate change in years to come, Farnworth said.

For example, he said, that means making sure culverts along the Coquihalla Highway are built to handle the volume of water that surged through last fall.

It’s an ongoing process to determine the full costs of recovering and rebuilding from the flooding and landslides, with on-the-ground assessment­s and significan­t work to repair bridges and highways still underway, Farnworth added.

“As damage assessment takes place, as the repair works take place, as the recovery takes place, we work with the federal government, giving them the data and the informatio­n that they need in order to determine the exact costs that are being incurred by the province,” he said.

The B.C. and the federal government both understood the scope of the disaster and the significan­t costs from the beginning, Farnworth said.

Blair noted the advance payment is in addition to $200 million in federal funding announced in June to support recovery efforts from severe wildfires last summer.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Collapsed sections of bridges destroyed by severe flooding and landslides on the Coquihalla Highway north of Hope are seen in November 2021.
DARRYL DYCK, THE CANADIAN PRESS Collapsed sections of bridges destroyed by severe flooding and landslides on the Coquihalla Highway north of Hope are seen in November 2021.

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