Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. community needs help after flood: official

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Nov, 2021 01:51 PM
  • B.C. community needs help after flood: official

SPENCES BRIDGE, B.C. - A director with the Thompson-Nicola Regional District says it could be years before some residents of Spences Bridge, B.C., can return home after flooding and a mudslide hit the area.

Steven Rice, who is also a farmer from the small community southwest of Kamloops, says he and many other residents were forced to flee their properties with little more than the clothes on their backs.

He says the Nicola River, which runs along flood-damaged Highway 8, has changed course and left some farms underwater.

The flooding hit on Nov. 15, with a subsequent mudslide wiping out the highway and destroying or damaging dozens of properties in the area.

B.C.'s Ministry of Transportation did not return an immediate request for comment on an estimate on how long repairs to the highway would take.

Rice says the federal and provincial governments need to increase relief efforts and help winterize affected properties to ensure no more damage takes place.

Rice says the damage is particularly hard as many residents rely on farming and hunting to survive.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. announces five paid sick leave days

B.C. announces five paid sick leave days
Workers in British Columbia will be eligible for a minimum of five paid sick days a year starting in January. The new sick leave policy goes into effect Jan. 1 and affects all workers covered by the province's Employment Standards Act.

B.C. announces five paid sick leave days

New Westminster Police Officers assaulted while arresting domestic assault suspect

New Westminster Police Officers assaulted while arresting domestic assault suspect
On November 23rd at approximately 3:41 pm, the New Westminster Police Department was called to a domestic assault incident in progress where it was learned the suspect had committed an assault and had fled the scene. The suspect, a 29-year-old New Westminster resident, was taken into custody

New Westminster Police Officers assaulted while arresting domestic assault suspect

Groups threaten Alberta premier with lawsuit

Groups threaten Alberta premier with lawsuit
A coalition of at least eight environmental groups is threatening to sue Alberta Premier Jason Kenney for defamation if he doesn't retract and apologize for statements saying a public inquiry found they spread misinformation about the province's oil and gas industry.

Groups threaten Alberta premier with lawsuit

B.C. announces financial help for evacuees

B.C. announces financial help for evacuees
Mike Farnworth is asking residents to pay close attention to the weather forecast as more storms are expected after a so-called atmospheric river dumped an unprecedented amount of rain on the southwest part of the province.

B.C. announces financial help for evacuees

Union calls for review of veterans' case managers

Union calls for review of veterans' case managers
The Union of Veterans' Affairs Employees made its request in a letter to Veterans Affairs Minister Lawrence MacAulay this week after The Canadian Press reported this month on the large number of veterans assigned to individual case managers.

Union calls for review of veterans' case managers

Regulator approves J&J vaccine from Baltimore

Regulator approves J&J vaccine from Baltimore
Canada had rejected hundreds of thousands of doses of the vaccine this past summer due to contamination concerns about the plant, and only imported Johnson & Johnson doses, also known as Janssen, manufactured in Europe.    

Regulator approves J&J vaccine from Baltimore