As some evacuees from devastating flooding in British Columbia were allowed to return home Tuesday, the mayor of Abbotsford said preparations were progressing for another storm that's expected later this week.
Henry Braun said Tuesday the city has finished inspecting its dike system and found less than one per cent needed repair after last week's heavy rainfall. About 80 per cent of the repairs were complete, he added.
"We expect another five feet of height to be added to the dike prior to the weather event anticipated for Thursday," Braun told a news conference.
"I am hopeful that this will put us in the best position to manage the rain that will come."
Additional crews will be moved to the erosion of the dyke upstream of Atkinson once this repairs is complete. The dyke repairs near Barrowtown and Cole Road are complete.
— City of Abbotsford (@City_Abbotsford) November 23, 2021
đź‘ŹA big thank you to all our crews who are making this happen.
Braun said the Barrowtown water pump station is also being fortified through sandbagging and additional pumping with help from the Canadian Armed Forces. After the last storm, he said damage could have been worse if the key pump station had failed.
He also encouraged local residents to prepare an emergency kit in advance of the coming storm.
A week after the city of Merritt was forced to evacuate when a river flooded into the community of about 7,000, Mayor Linda Brown announced the first phase of a three-step plan allowing people to return home.
About 1,500 residents were allowed to return Tuesday, with certain properties remaining on evacuation alert and under a boil-water advisory.
"What you are coming home to is a city that's changed," said Brown in a post on the city's website.
Returning residents were asked to help limit the pressure on key pieces of municipal infrastructure including the sewage system.
"You will be asked to use as little water as possible to preserve supplies for the fire department, and you will not have an operational hospital," said Brown.
The evacuation was ordered Nov. 15 as the Coldwater River burst its banks and overwhelmed the city's wastewater treatment plant.
Environment Canada posted special weather statements early Tuesday for much of B.C.'s inner south coast, including the flood-damaged Fraser Valley. The statement warned a new storm is expected to hit the region Wednesday night, dropping 40 to 80 millimetres of rain, before easing Friday.
"This storm will be shorter-lived and less intense than the event over Nov. 13-15. However, it will still bring moderate to heavy rain and strong winds."
A second so-called atmospheric river is also forecast to drench the south coast Saturday, the weather office said, with total accumulations from both storms likely to exceed 100 millimetres.
Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd. said it planned to reopen its line between Kamloops and Vancouver on Tuesday, but CP's CEO cautioned the next 10 days will be critical as the company moves toward returning to full service. CP said it would work closely with customers and terminals to clear backlogs and get freight moving efficiently again.
Canadian National Railway Co. issued a statement saying the railway plans to restore limited service over flood-affected track by Wednesday "barring any unforeseen issues."
Supply chain troubles, including a precautionary closure of the Trans Mountain pipeline, have led to some shortages. The B.C. government said Monday that gas rationing would be in effect across the Lower Mainland, Sunshine Coast and parts of southern Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands.
Parkland Corp. processes the crude oil supplied by the Trans Mountain pipeline and said it would pause its refinery operations in Burnaby while the pipeline is offline.
The refinery, which is a key source of gasoline for the Vancouver area, will be maintained in ready-mode so it can resume processing quickly once sufficient crude oil feedstocks become available, Parkland said in a statement.