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View Full Version : Experts fear Fraser River could overflow banks



SpongeG
02-26-2007, 01:21 AM
damn these doom and gloom experts!

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Vancouver Province
Published: Sunday, February 25, 2007

VANCOUVER - It has been 59 years since B.C.'s Fraser River last surged past its dikes and swallowed a couple of thousand homes.

This time, it could be tens of thousands.

"It's not a question of if it happens - it's a question of when," says Chilliwack, B.C., Mayor Clint Hames. "We're playing a waiting game."

Riverside B.C. communities from Hope to Richmond play the same terrifying game each spring as the muddy Fraser rises with the snowmelt.

But this year, the flood threat is even more real. A recent report by the Fraser Basin Council says the dikes protecting the Fraser Valley are too low, and high water could affect hundreds of thousands of people who live and work on the floodplain.

More than 320,000 people live on the Fraser Valley floodplain. Multiple dike failures could result in $6 billion in direct damage, according to the Fraser Basin Council.

"We've been lucky so far, but why do we put ourselves through this?" asks Hames. "It's like we're waiting for a flood to happen before we act - like we've never learned the benefit of prevention.

"Part of me says that if this is the way it's going to be, let's have the flood sooner rather than later and get on with it."

The mayor may get his cynical wish. A record snowpack in the mountains that feed the Fraser could, with the right weather conditions, cause a devastating flood this spring.

"There is no part of the province that has a below-normal snowpack," says Allan Chapman, head of the B.C.'s River Forecast Centre. "The data results in an early alert for high flows and potential flooding."

In Delta, B.C., Mayor Lois Jackson is already bracing for the political fallout.

"There's going to be hell to pay if that river floods," she says. "No one is going to want to take responsibility for this."

Since the federal and provincial governments stopped funding dike work in 1995, local authorities have been plunged into the murky waters of flood control. They're barely staying afloat. High dike maintenance costs have left little money for upgrades.

"It's an absolute disgrace that nothing has been done," says Jackson. "No one is listening. The entire system has failed us badly."

B.C. Provincial Public Safety Minister John Les admits disaster mitigation should be a priority for the government.

"We have to take the position that flooding is not an option," the Chilliwack MLA says. "Our first obligation is to do everything we possibly can to prevent it."

Les says he's spoken to federal Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day about flood control funding but, so far, the talk has not led to action.

http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/news/story.html?id=5f43ad17-e9d0-48df-9db1-a64e7fe031cb&k=81356

newflyer
02-26-2007, 03:33 AM
Quick... open the floodway gates!!!!

.... sorry wrong city . :shrug:

Xelebes
02-26-2007, 04:40 AM
Meh, it's just like flooding in Edmonton.

Wait a minute, no it isn't. We've only got neighbourhoods that low.

Canadian Mind
02-26-2007, 05:59 AM
Vancouver is fucked unless they do something about this. 'ole Campbell can kiss his precious games goodbye if this happens.

mr.x
02-26-2007, 06:10 AM
Vancouver is fucked unless they do something about this. 'ole Campbell can kiss his precious games goodbye if this happens.

Not necessarily. I doubt we would lose the Games....it's our opportunity for us to rebound if such a devestating flood were to happen. The only venue prone to flooding is the oval in Richmond and the airport.....speed skating, at worse, would have to be moved to Calgary and YVR would be repaired. I'd think the feds would really help us.

Canadian Mind
02-26-2007, 06:14 AM
I'm not concerned about the venues... i'm sure we could still get the oval done even if its washed away this spring. i was more thinking about folks bitching about budgets because of all the extra dollars we'd have to expend.

cornholio
02-26-2007, 07:55 AM
Not necessarily. I doubt we would lose the Games....it's our opportunity for us to rebound if such a devestating flood were to happen. The only venue prone to flooding is the oval in Richmond and the airport.....speed skating, at worse, would have to be moved to Calgary and YVR would be repaired. I'd think the feds would really help us.

The lower Fraser is not at a big risk of flooding so the airport and speed skating oval are relativly safe compared to the valley. Its Chiliwack, Hope and those areas that are in the most danger. This all thanks to the ocean and gravity.

Nutterbug
02-27-2007, 05:21 PM
I hope we get Sumas Lake back.

twoNeurons
02-27-2007, 06:31 PM
Seriously, though... why not DO something about it now, as opposed to waiting for the worst to happen.

Isn't this the same thing that happened in New Orleans. Natural Disasters are getting more and more common.

I mean can upgrading the dikes hurt? Of course not... and especially now, what with a large budget surplus.

It's not as if the region doesn't have a precedent of flooding before. The area used to be a lake for goodness sakes and Chilliwack City centre's five corners was up to 35' below sea level. I believe it's built up now, but still under sea level.

There is an actual opportunity to DO something, now.

These reports may be doom n' gloom... but sitting back and doing nothing isn't exactly a wise course of action.



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