Close X
Thursday, November 7, 2024
ADVT 
National

Witness told rescuers missing B.C. man swept down the rain-swollen Coquitlam River

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Oct, 2024 03:25 PM
  • Witness told rescuers missing B.C. man swept down the rain-swollen Coquitlam River

A witness reported seeing a man who's been missing since Sunday fall into the swollen Coquitlam River as he tried to rescue a dog, and was "immediately swept away," a local search and rescue manager said on Wednesday. 

Ian MacDonald said Coquitlam Search and Rescue received the report about 59-year-old Robert Belding on Tuesday.

Belding's daughter, Jessica Belding, said she remains hopeful her dad will be found alive several days after his disappearance.

She said her father and his brother went to a friend's home that borders the Coquitlam River to help with a flooded basement. Her dad took his brother's dog for a walk, but didn't return, Belding said.

Coquitlam was one of the hardest-hit areas as an atmospheric river weather system rolled over southern B.C. last weekend, dumping more than 250 millimetres of rain on the Metro Vancouver community.

Belding said she and other family members began searching on Sunday night, and while they found the wet dog, there's been no sign of her father. 

"We're pretty distraught," she said in an interview on her cellphone while she was out searching for her father on Wednesday.

"I think some of us are pretty numb because it just doesn't seem real. It's getting harder by the day."

She said her dad enjoys the outdoors and she's hopeful he wasn't too badly hurt, that he "managed to stay conscious," and is somewhere they haven't looked yet. 

Belding said there is overwhelming support from community members asking her how can they help, though people should stay off the water for safety reasons. 

"But if anyone is in the area and they want to help, just keeping an extra eye, taking that extra time to look while they're walking … just to see if they see any sign of someone somewhere, even in the bushes or on the side of the bank or anything."

MacDonald, a search manager with Coquitlam Search and Rescue, said the effort to find Robert Belding has included helicopter flyovers and a marine team that searched the area where the Coquitlam River flows into the Fraser River.

MacDonald said his team would be flying over the river again on Thursday or Friday. 

He said the water level in the river is often low in summertime, flowing lower than a person's knees, but it turned into a "raging" torrent during the weekend downpours.

B.C.'s River Forecast Centre had issued a flood warning for the Coquitlam River, although it was downgrading to a flood watch by Sunday and has since been rescinded.

MacDonald said the water was still about 1.5 metres deep on Tuesday. 

"It was very high. It was moving very fast, and it was full of debris," he said "There (were) trees and bits of wood and dead fish, all kinds of things in the water as well."

At least three deaths have been linked to the torrential rain over the weekend.

A woman was killed Saturday when her home was swept away in a mudslide on the outskirts of Coquitlam, and two others died on the west coast of Vancouver Island when a road washed out and an overflowing river submerged their vehicles.

Jonathan Helmus, director of utilities with the City of Coquitlam, said the rain was very intense, greater than a one-in-200-year event. 

"We were the hardest hit in the Lower Mainland and it's the most significant storm we've ever seen," Helmus said in an interview on Wednesday.

The city had prepared by inspecting culverts and other critical infrastructure, sweeping roads and ensuring around-the-clock coverage by crews, he said, in addition to Coquitlam's longer-term planning for watershed management and climate change.

By comparison, Helmus said the atmospheric river that deluged southwestern B.C. in November 2021 brought 100 millimetres of rainfall to Coquitlam in 24 hours.

The District of North Vancouver said it is triaging resources after the community was "drenched" with nearly 350 millimetres of rain over the weekend. 

A statement on the district's website said teams were focusing on immediate "life safety" issues stemming from the storm, as well as emergency repairs, debris removal and assessing the full extent of the damage.

"North Vancouver is well accustomed to heavy rain and stormy weather. However, no weather event in recent years has brought this much rainfall here," it said.

The district declared a local state of emergency on Sunday and ordered six homes evacuated in the Deep Cove neighbourhood, when an inspection found potential failure of private infrastructure that could create a public safety risk. 

Images shared on social media on Saturday showed brown torrents of water pouring down on waterfront homes on Panorama Drive in Deep Cove.

MORE National ARTICLES

15 charged in PNE riots

15 charged in PNE riots
Vancouver police say 15 people have been charged with mischief for riot-like violence when a headline performer suddenly pulled out of a music festival at the P-N-E last summer. Police say the resulting mayhem and property destruction caused an estimated 300-thousand dollars damage at the P-N-E amphitheatre and in the surrounding neighbourhood.

15 charged in PNE riots

Ukraine President Zelenskyy to visit Canada this week: sources

Ukraine President Zelenskyy to visit Canada this week: sources
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is set to visit Canada this week after stops at the United Nations and the White House. This would be Zelenskyy's first trip to Canada since Russia began its large-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, although the leader delivered a virtual address to Parliament the next month.  

Ukraine President Zelenskyy to visit Canada this week: sources

B.C. Sikhs ask for protection after Trudeau links Nijjar killing to India

B.C. Sikhs ask for protection after Trudeau links Nijjar killing to India
Trudeau's announcement is spurring calls from B.C.'s Sikh community to better protect its members. British Columbia Premier David Eby is also among those expressing concern. He said Monday he had received a briefing from Canada's spy agency about the "assassination" of Nijjar and was "deeply disturbed" by what he was told.

B.C. Sikhs ask for protection after Trudeau links Nijjar killing to India

B.C. launches 'one-stop shop' for provincial permits needed to build homes

B.C. launches 'one-stop shop' for provincial permits needed to build homes
British Columbia's government is aiming to speed up the construction of new homes and secondary suites by releasing new guides and programs to help streamline the process. Premier David Eby says the new Single Housing Application Service, first promised in January, gives builders a clear understanding of the provincial permits needed to build a house so they don't have to navigate the "maze of the provincial government" on their own. 

B.C. launches 'one-stop shop' for provincial permits needed to build homes

Canada's inflation rate jumps to 4%, making the BoC's next rate decision harder

Canada's inflation rate jumps to 4%, making the BoC's next rate decision harder
Canada's inflation rate jumped to four per cent last month, as economists warn the latest consumer price index report spells bad news for the Bank of Canada.  Statistics Canada released its latest inflation reading on Tuesday, which shows the annual rate rose from 3.3 per cent in July, marking the second consecutive month inflation has risen.

Canada's inflation rate jumps to 4%, making the BoC's next rate decision harder

Climate, development, India top of mind as Trudeau travels to UN General Assembly

Climate, development, India top of mind as Trudeau travels to UN General Assembly
 The day before departing for New York, Trudeau rocked the House of Commons with "credible allegations" linking agents of India's government to the deadly shooting this past June of a Sikh leader in Surrey, B.C.  It's a striking contextual backdrop for the week ahead at the United Nations, a place where aspirational visions of a prosperous and peaceful future often crash headlong into stark political realities. 

Climate, development, India top of mind as Trudeau travels to UN General Assembly