Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Court certifies flooding lawsuit against Abbotsford, B.C., as class action

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 May, 2024 02:34 PM
  • Court certifies flooding lawsuit against Abbotsford, B.C., as class action

A judge has certified a class-action lawsuit alleging destruction in the November 2021 atmospheric river flooding in the Fraser Valley was magnified by improper operations of a pump station.

B.C. Supreme Court Justice S. Dev Dley says the lawsuit's allegations against the City of Abbotsford potentially affected a significant number of people in the nearby Sumas Prairie area.

Court documents say the certification means others affected by the flooding can join the lawsuit against Abbotsford for allegedly failing "to close the flood boxes at the (Barrowtown) pump station."

None of the allegations have been proven in court, and the City of Abbotsford says in an email to The Canadian Press that it does not comment on active legal matters.

The lawsuit was initiated last year by two Sumas Prairie residents, one of whom has since died.

The record rainfall in November 2021 in Southwestern B.C. flooded farms, killing thousands of animals, and closed highways while washing out Interior highways, and the province said in February it will pay almost $80 million to help upgrade the Barrowtown Pump Station that was nearly overwhelmed.

The lawsuit says operators at the pump station did not close the flood boxes during the 2021 atmospheric river event, leading to water from the Fraser River flooding back into Sumas Prairie, which was a 40-square-kilometre lake before being drained in the 1920s.

The plaintiffs, represented by Slater Vecchio LLP, say residents "sustained physical damage and harm as a result of the flooding" and they are suing Abbotsford for "negligence and nuisance" for its operational decisions at the pump station.

In the documents, the City of Abbotsford says that, while it acknowledges "many residents of the city suffered substantial upheaval and property damage," the flooding in Sumas Prairie was caused by the nearby Nooksack River and not the Fraser.

Abbotsford says in court documents that people with alleged claims against the city should make those claims individually, not as a class-action lawsuit.

The document says there are more than 1,400 properties in the Sumas Prairie area.

Then-B.C. Agriculture Minister Lana Popham said in 2022 that the Sumas Prairie dike breach saw 1,100 farms placed under evacuation order or alert.

Popham said floodwaters swamped about 150 square kilometres of farmland that resulted in the deaths of 630,000 chickens, 420 cattle and 12,000 hogs.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada mulls Chinese EV tariff following U.S. move but is not committing to it

Canada mulls Chinese EV tariff following U.S. move but is not committing to it
Canada is looking at the massive new U.S. import tariffs on Chinese-made electric vehicles imposed by President Joe Biden earlier this month, but is not making any commitment to following suit north of the border. Chinese brands are not a major player in Canada's EV market at the moment but imports from China have exploded in the last year as Tesla switched from U.S. factories for its Canadian sales to its manufacturing plant in Shanghai.

Canada mulls Chinese EV tariff following U.S. move but is not committing to it

Miller increases cap on applications for Palestinians to join relatives in Canada

Miller increases cap on applications for Palestinians to join relatives in Canada
Immigration Minister Marc Miller is increasing the number of applications that will be processed under a much-criticized program to reunite Palestinians with Canadian relatives. The move comes as he testifies about measures introduced months ago that were meant to bring relatives of Canadians from conflict zones in the Gaza Strip and Sudan to safety.

Miller increases cap on applications for Palestinians to join relatives in Canada

As Canada warms, infectious disease risks spread north

As Canada warms, infectious disease risks spread north
It was 15 years ago that Ontario student Justin Wood started feeling sick. When it came, the diagnosis was a rare one: Lyme disease. At the time, the tick-borne illness was only responsible for a few hundred infections a year in Canada, according to government statistics. But cases of Lyme disease have now increased more than 1,000 per cent in a decade as the warming climate pushes the boundaries of a range of pathogens and risk factors northward.

As Canada warms, infectious disease risks spread north

Fort Nelson, B.C., evacuees heading home after wildfire evacuation order ends

Fort Nelson, B.C., evacuees heading home after wildfire evacuation order ends
Residents in Fort Nelson are returning home after being evacuated from the community for more than two weeks due to wildfires. The Northern Rockies Regional Municipality and the Fort Nelson First Nation jointly rescinded their evacuation orders at 8 a.m. Monday, lifting roadblocks and clearing the way for people to go home.

Fort Nelson, B.C., evacuees heading home after wildfire evacuation order ends

Surrey business robbed

Surrey business robbed
Mounties in Surrey are hoping to speak with anyone with dashcam footage of the 9200 block of 120 Street on Friday evening after a business was robbed at gunpoint. Police say two men wearing masks entered the unnamed business with what appeared to be firearms, spoke with one of the employees, and stole a cellphone as they walked out.

Surrey business robbed

2 people dead in plane crash

2 people dead in plane crash
The RCMP says two people have died after a plane crash near Squamish on Friday. Police say they were able to access the remote area located south of Squamish on the west side of Howe Sound via air. 

2 people dead in plane crash