Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. aware of dike problems before destructive flooding in 2021, documents show

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Sep, 2023 11:14 AM
  • B.C. aware of dike problems before destructive flooding in 2021, documents show

Officials with the British Columbia government and the City of Merritt were aware of significant problems with dikes for several years before a series of atmospheric rivers flooded the community, documents released through a freedom of information request show.

The documents obtained by the B.C. office of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives show a registered professional engineer found numerous problems in 2018 with dikes protecting the community in the province's southern Interior. 

Dike maintenance is a municipal responsibility but with provincial oversight.

The engineer, Aaron Hahn with the B.C.-based consulting company Interior Dams, reiterated the same concerns in 2019, 2020 and in June 2021, just five months before the flooding that forced more than 7,000 people out of their homes.

Hahn's 2021 report identified ongoing concerns including "unauthorized excavations and modifications" to the city's dikes, as well as "excessive" vegetation growth, slumping and the loss of waterside embankment material, and the displacement of erosion protection measures such as rocks used for reinforcement.

The report would be Hahn's last before torrential rainfall pushed the Coldwater River to overflow its banks in November 2021, causing dike failures, the shutdown of the city's water system and wastewater treatment plant, as well as extensive property damage amounting to about $150 million, according to the city's website.

His 2019 checklist described large cottonwood trees and other vegetation as "rampant" along one of the dikes. Its integrity had been "severely compromised," wrote Hahn, classifying the problem as a "high priority" to be addressed within two years.

Hahn's 2021 checklist stated the crest of one of the dikes had been "severely eroded" or excavated in one area and identified a "possible sink hole."

The report, dated June 19, 2021, said "the dikes are in a similar condition to previous years with the exception of minor changes to erosion patterns and vegetation growth," suggesting no significant work had been done to address the problems.

Hahn's report recommended "immediate implementation" of maintenance and other activities to address the high-priority concerns.

Reached by phone, Hahn declined to comment further on his findings.

Ben Parfitt, who submitted the document request through his work as a resource policy analyst with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, said municipal authorities in B.C. are responsible for maintaining their own dikes.

But smaller communities often lack the funds necessary to make repairs, he said.

"The provincial government knows, or ought to know, that the costs of dealing with this infrastructure are in many cases beyond the ability of local government."

The Union of B.C. Municipalities endorsed a resolution in 2015 that called on the province to take back control of dikes managed by local governments, saying "the administrative and financial resources required to undertake these responsibilities are an increasingly unsustainable burden to small communities."

The union's website includes a response from the B.C. government at the time, which outlined its views on why the responsibility should stay with local authorities.

The union, which is the voice of local governments, endorsed a similar resolution in September 2022, saying the previous year's flooding had "emphasized the need to re-examine the province's 2003 decision to download diking responsibility to local governments."

While local authorities are responsible for dike maintenance, Parfitt noted the provincial inspector of dikes has powers under B.C.'s Dike Maintenance Act to inspect any dike and issue orders for necessary repairs or maintenance.

"They can issue orders at any point in time based either on inspections or their read of the (annual inspection reports) provided by the local dike authorities," he said.

If an order is not followed, the legislation stipulates the B.C. government may take steps to complete the work and recover its expenses from the local diking authority.

Yet Parfitt said the freedom of information request did not produce any such orders from the province in response to concerns about dikes in Merritt.

Parfitt had requested copies of annual dike inspection reports sent to the provincial inspector by authorities in Merritt, Abbotsford, Princeton, Chilliwack and Richmond between 2017 and 2021, as well as any related responses from the province.

The response to Parfitt's freedom of information request contains nearly 5,300 pages of documents, but he said just one page came from a source within the provincial government — an email pertaining to dikes in Princeton, B.C., about 90 kilometres south of Merritt, where a dike also failed during the 2021 flooding.

"If the flooding and other disasters that we saw in 2021 tell us anything, it is that governments should be spending money proactively to avert potentially bigger payouts down the road to fix things and to address other things, for example, lawsuits," he said, noting the B.C. government is named in lawsuits related to the flooding in Abbotsford and a landslide that killed five people that November.

The Ministry of Forests, which is responsible for overseeing dikes and dams in B.C., did not respond to a series of questions on dike oversight in time for publication.

Parfitt said he also sent questions to the ministry, and the answers he received did not provide a reason why provincial officials did not issue any orders for repair work to be carried out in response to Merritt's annual dike inspection reports.

Michael Goetz, who became mayor of Merritt a year after the severe flooding in November 2021, declined to be interviewed about the earlier dike inspections.

In an emailed statement, he said city officials are focused on moving forward with rebuilding and they would "possibly look back" once the community is secure.

A document posted by the city last year shows the B.C. government had provided just over $24 million for “interim flood support,” with nearly half earmarked for housing.

The city had also received approval for infrastructure repairs to be funded through the disaster financial assistance program, which sees costs split between the provincial and federal governments, the document said.

Last February, the province announced that it would provide Merritt with $2 million for diking around the city’s public works facility that had been inundated in 2021.

A flood mitigation study, funded with $329,000 from the province, has also been completed.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Calgary police say suspect may be in B.C. or Ont. after not returning to psych centre

Calgary police say suspect may be in B.C. or Ont. after not returning to psych centre
A Canada-wide warrant has been issued for a 52-year-old man whom police say failed to return to a psychiatric hospital in Calgary last week. Calgary police say Patrick Leo McGann is wanted nationally for being unlawfully at large and an Alberta-wide warrant has been issued for disobeying a court order.

Calgary police say suspect may be in B.C. or Ont. after not returning to psych centre

5 paddlers and a dog rescued from Yukon river

5 paddlers and a dog rescued from Yukon river
Five paddlers and a dog were rescued from Kathleen River in Kluane National Park after they lost their canoe in rough water. Yukon R-C-M-P say it happened on Saturday when Parks Canada staff were told about the group of stranded paddlers.  

5 paddlers and a dog rescued from Yukon river

Highest court refuses to hear appeal from B.C. churches opposed to COVID-19 ruling

Highest court refuses to hear appeal from B.C. churches opposed to COVID-19 ruling
The Supreme Court of Canada has refused to hear an appeal from three British Columbia churches that argued their constitutional rights were violated when provincial restrictions banned indoor religious services at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. The case stems from orders issued by provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry during the second wave of the pandemic more than two years ago.

Highest court refuses to hear appeal from B.C. churches opposed to COVID-19 ruling

Man stabbed in hospital

Man stabbed in hospital
Police in New Westminster are looking for witnesses after a stabbing sent a man to hospital. They say it happened on August 2nd at around noon when police received a call about a stabbing on the street in the city's downtown area.

Man stabbed in hospital

BC temps to hit 30s this weekend

BC temps to hit 30s this weekend
British Columbia's government is warning that temperatures are expected to reach the high 30s starting this weekend. But Emergency Management Minister Bowinn Ma says a repeat of the 2021 heat dome that killed more than 615 people is not forecast.

BC temps to hit 30s this weekend

Audit finds 800 items missing from Canadian history museum, no plan to deal with it

Audit finds 800 items missing from Canadian history museum, no plan to deal with it
The auditor's team was particularly concerned that there was no robust way of managing the inventory. The audit found the corporation did such a poor job keeping tabs on those objects that more than 800 were declared missing during inventory inspections between 2012 and 2022.  

Audit finds 800 items missing from Canadian history museum, no plan to deal with it