Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Debris Clearing Begins After Creeks Flood Streets, Homes In Vancouver's North Shore

The Canadian Press Darpan, 04 Nov, 2014 01:58 PM
    VANCOUVER — Homeowners in Vancouver's North Shore were assessing the damage after creeks overflowed and flooded streets and houses overnight.
     
    Heavy rainfall caused culverts in roughly five different areas across the North Shore to overflow, said District of North Vancouver Asst. Fire Chief Michael Cairns.
     
    "There's pretty substantial damage to a lot of houses," he said on Tuesday. "There was too much water flow. We did try to divert from houses as much as possible."
     
    All available fire trucks from the District, as well as the City of North Vancouver and West Vancouver were called out, with between 10 and 15 homes evacuated at one point.  
     
    "In a lot of locations there wasn't a lot we could do," he said. "Restoration crews will be working hard for quite some time."
     
    Cairns said crews spent the night clearing creeks with heavy machinery and diverting water flow from houses.
     
    He said the flooding had mostly subsided by mid-morning, and municipal crews would spend the day clearing debris.
     
    Up to 86 millimetres of rain battered the North Shore over the past 24 hours as a strong frontal system moved through British Columbia's south coast.   

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Gone Downtown: 2015 Real Estate Trend

    Gone Downtown: 2015 Real Estate Trend
    TORONTO - Homeowners who choose the convenience of city life over the more generous living space in suburbia are driving Canada's real estate market, according to a new report jointly produced by consultancy PricewaterhouseCoopers and the non-profit Urban Land Institute.

    Gone Downtown: 2015 Real Estate Trend

    Cdn consulate in Istanbul to reopen after officials say powder was chalk dust

    Cdn consulate in Istanbul to reopen after officials say powder was chalk dust
    ANKARA, Turkey - The Canadian consulate in Istanbul will reopen Thursday after tests revealed yellow powder sent there last week was similar to chalk dust.

    Cdn consulate in Istanbul to reopen after officials say powder was chalk dust

    Parliamentary Budget Officer says budget for Arctic patrol ships 'insufficient'

    Parliamentary Budget Officer says budget for Arctic patrol ships 'insufficient'
    OTTAWA - There's a fresh spat brewing between the Parliament's top bean counter and the Conservative government, this time over Arctic patrol ships.

    Parliamentary Budget Officer says budget for Arctic patrol ships 'insufficient'

    Rough consensual sex including pain is 'murky' legal area in Canada: experts

    Rough consensual sex including pain is 'murky' legal area in Canada: experts
    Rough sex that inflicts pain is a murky legal area that can still lead to assault convictions in Canada, say legal experts.

    Rough consensual sex including pain is 'murky' legal area in Canada: experts

    How would public health officials trace an Ebola patient's footsteps?

    How would public health officials trace an Ebola patient's footsteps?
    OTTAWA - Should Canada's first Ebola case ever present itself, public health officials will be faced with a daunting challenge: tracking down everyone the patient had contact with in order to contain the spread of the virus.

    How would public health officials trace an Ebola patient's footsteps?

    Justin Bourque apologizes for Moncton shootings, to be sentenced Friday

    Justin Bourque apologizes for Moncton shootings, to be sentenced Friday
    MONCTON, N.B. - Justin Bourque apologized Tuesday for the shootings in Moncton, N.B., that killed three RCMP officers and injured two others, saying the rationale that he gave to police for the rampage was the talk of "some arrogant pissant."

    Justin Bourque apologizes for Moncton shootings, to be sentenced Friday