Close X
Monday, October 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Atmospheric river passes in southern B.C., but area rivers still rising

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Oct, 2023 09:57 AM
  • Atmospheric river passes in southern B.C., but area rivers still rising

Rainfall warnings across Vancouver Island and the inner south coast have lifted in most areas, but the effects of British Columbia's first atmospheric river of autumn could take a little longer to ease.

The B.C. River Forecast Centre posted flood watches across western Vancouver Island and for the Englishman River near Parksville, warning of levels seen only once every 10 years on some waterways.

High streamflow advisories and the risk of local flooding cover the rest of Vancouver Island, most of the inner south coast north of Vancouver and the Interior regions of the Upper Columbia, North and South Thompson.

Environment Canada says the mild, subtropical surge of moisture that created B.C.'s latest atmospheric river Tuesday and Wednesday had mostly passed, but forecasters expected showers to linger through the day.

The weather office says the storm had dumped 233 millimetres of rain at the Kennedy Lake forestry station east of Ucluelet by late Wednesday and at least 172 millimetres at the Tofino airport, while parts of Metro Vancouver received up to 100 millimetres.

The accumulations mark the heaviest downpours across the south coast in almost a year and Environment Canada records show the greatest deluge before that was during the atmospheric river in November 2021 that caused devastating flooding, washouts and landslides from Metro Vancouver to the southern Interior.

MORE National ARTICLES

Ottawa no longer shipping COVID tests to provinces

Ottawa no longer shipping COVID tests to provinces
Ottawa has ordered more than 811 million rapid tests since the beginning of the pandemic with a price tag of about $5 billion. About 680 million of those went to provinces and territories.

Ottawa no longer shipping COVID tests to provinces

Visitors can continue applying for work permits inside Canada

Visitors can continue applying for work permits inside Canada
The move, an extension of a Covid-era temporary public policy that was set to expire today, has now been extended by two years, until February 28, 2025. Visitors applying under this public policy who held a work permit within the last 12 months will also continue to be able to request interim work authorization to begin working for their new employer more quickly.

Visitors can continue applying for work permits inside Canada

Victim punched in stomach and knocked to the ground, suspects robbed him of his headphones

Victim punched in stomach and knocked to the ground, suspects robbed him of his headphones
The victim was walking towards the New Westminster SkyTrain Station at approximately 9:00 am when he was punched in the stomach and knocked to the ground by two men he didn’t know. One of the suspects robbed him of his headphones before both suspects fled the area.

Victim punched in stomach and knocked to the ground, suspects robbed him of his headphones

Canada more trusting of China in 2016: Rosenberg

Canada more trusting of China in 2016: Rosenberg
Citing an unnamed national security source, the newspaper reported Zhang was instructed by Beijing to donate $1 million in honour of the elder Trudeau in 2014, two years before the $200,000 donation to the Trudeau Foundation was made.

Canada more trusting of China in 2016: Rosenberg

Vancouver home sales up 77% from Jan.: board

Vancouver home sales up 77% from Jan.: board
The board says sales for the month totalled 1,808, roughly 33 per cent below the 10-year February sales average. There were 3,467 new listings last month, a 36.6 per cent decrease, when compared with February 2022, and a 5.2 per cent increase, when compared with January.    

Vancouver home sales up 77% from Jan.: board

Three skiers dead in B.C. avalanche

Three skiers dead in B.C. avalanche
 RCMP say the three were among 10 heli-skiers caught by the slide near the Panorama Mountain Resort, about 150 kilometres southwest of Banff, Alta. Cpl. James Grady says everyone in the group has been accounted for, and four are injured but are expected to recover.

Three skiers dead in B.C. avalanche