Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Forecast Thunderstorms Add To Flooding Concerns Across Southern B.C.

Darpan News Desk, 31 May, 2017 12:22 PM
    VANCOUVER — Residents in several areas of British Columbia are bracing for severe thunderstorms as another round of wicked weather bears down on flood-weary regions.
     
    Environment Canada has issued severe thunderstorm watches for areas including the Shuswap and Okanagan east to the Alberta boundary, and the Cariboo, Prince George and Fort Nelson regions of central and northeastern B.C.
     
    Large hail, powerful wind gusts and heavy rain could accompany the storms, adding to the woes of residents in the southern Interior, where river and lake levels continue to creep past flood stage.
     
    New evacuation orders were issued late Tuesday in Olalla, southwest of Penticton, as Keremeos Creek threatens six properties and the Okanagan Indian Band also ordered evacuations for several properties on the west side of Okanagan Lake, south of Vernon. 
     
    Homes at the mouth of Mission Creek, near downtown Kelowna, have been placed on evacuation alert and the River Forecast Centre has also issued flood watches for the Slocan, Kettle, Salmon and Nicola rivers.
     
    It has been almost a month since flooding began in the Central Okanagan, and because Okanagan Lake is 15 centimetres above historic flood levels, officials say it could be many more weeks before the water recedes.
     
    "Environment Canada reported Okanagan Lake has reached 343.15 metres  ... a four centimetre rise since May 30," the Central Okanagan Regional District says in a news release issued Wednesday.
     
    Crews are assessing the condition of flood protection and evaluating the need for repairs or additional measures after heavy rain and high wind overnight, the district says. 
     
    The Thompson Nicola Regional District is also warning of impending flooding as Kamloops Lake, and the North and South Thompson rivers creep up, threatening properties in Kamloops and along the length of those waterways.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Halifax Man Sentenced To Seven Years For Trafficking 14-Year-Old Girl

    Halifax Man Sentenced To Seven Years For Trafficking 14-Year-Old Girl
    Owen Ross Gibson-Skeir, 21, was arrested a year ago in Halifax and pleaded guilty in December to three charges.

    Halifax Man Sentenced To Seven Years For Trafficking 14-Year-Old Girl

    Edmonton Warehouse Stabber Sentenced To Life, No Parole Eligibility For 25 Years

    EDMONTON — A mentally ill Edmonton man who stabbed two co-workers to death and badly injured four others has been sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years.

    Edmonton Warehouse Stabber Sentenced To Life, No Parole Eligibility For 25 Years

    McDonald's Canada Says Info Of 95,000 Job Applicants Compromised

    McDonald's Canada Says Info Of 95,000 Job Applicants Compromised
    The company says the accessed information included names, addresses, phone numbers, employment histories and other standard job application information.

    McDonald's Canada Says Info Of 95,000 Job Applicants Compromised

    New Westminster Pub Worker Sanjeev Kainth Dies After Falling On Meat Slicer

    New Westminster Pub Worker Sanjeev Kainth Dies After Falling On Meat Slicer
    Sanjeev Kainth had a newborn daughter, and worked at River's Reach Pub as a line cook

    New Westminster Pub Worker Sanjeev Kainth Dies After Falling On Meat Slicer

    Drunk Driver's Mom Apologizes To Victims' Families At Son's Sentencing Hearing

    Drunk Driver's Mom Apologizes To Victims' Families At Son's Sentencing Hearing
    VANCOUVER — The mother of a man who drove drunk and killed three people on a British Columbia highway says her son's time in jail has made him a changed man.

    Drunk Driver's Mom Apologizes To Victims' Families At Son's Sentencing Hearing

    These UBC Students Have Invented an Overdose Detection Device

    These UBC Students Have Invented an Overdose Detection Device
    VANCOUVER — A group of students at the University of British Columbia have turned to technology in an effort to address the opioid crisis by creating a wearable device they say can detect an overdose.

    These UBC Students Have Invented an Overdose Detection Device