Some evacuation orders lifted in B.C.'s Interior as flooding threat eases
CBC
A state of local emergency was rescinded on Saturday in the Southern Interior city of Grand Forks, B.C., while some evacuation orders for properties under threat of flooding were also lifted.
The Regional District of Kootenay Boundary (RDKB) said in a release on Sunday afternoon that decreased rain in the area has resulted in a reduction in water levels in some rivers and creeks.
The regional district rescinded an evacuation order for 34 properties in the city of around 4,000 residents, located 500 kilometres east of Vancouver.
That order has been downgraded to an evacuation alert. Evacuation orders remain for at least 29 other properties, while hundreds also remain on evacuation alert in the region.
Mark Stephens, manager of emergency programs with RDKB, said on Sunday that the swelling Kettle and Granby rivers are now cresting and the threat of flooding is receding in the region.
"We've seen a reprieve from the weather," he said. "We're optimistic we'll see the river levels here start to decrease."
Grand Forks Mayor Everett Baker said there was no property damage reported from the flooding event.
He said the city learned from a devastating flood in 2018 that destroyed close to 100 homes. Since then, it has spent around $40 million buying out properties on the flood plain and investing in protective infrastructure such as new levees and pumping stations.
"I'm pleased to see the water is staying in the river and not downtown," he said.
In Cache Creek, a village about 350 kilometres northeast of Vancouver, a state of local emergency remains in place and has been extended until May 13.
Village officials said 21 properties remained on evacuation order, while 12 others were still on alert. Crews brought in sandbags, cleared asphalt and put in a mound of soil in a key location along the creek near Quartz Road in order to prevent further flooding.
Rising creek waters earlier in the week inundated parts of the village, flowing through its firehall, flooding several businesses and temporarily closing both Highway 1 and Highway 97.
"The water is staying in the channel now,'' said Cache Creek Mayor John Ranta. "And it doesn't seem to be flowing around or through the firehall the way it was the last few days.''
B.C. United MLA Jackie Tegart, whose Fraser-Nicola constituency includes Cache Creek, met with town residents Saturday. She said people are hopeful the worst of the flood threat is over.
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