Wednesday, May 13, 2026
ADVT 
National

Atmospheric-river drenching persists after 200 mm of rain falls on parts of B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Mar, 2026 09:49 AM
  • Atmospheric-river drenching persists after 200 mm of rain falls on parts of B.C.

The drenching for parts of British Columbia from an atmospheric river event is forecast to continue, adding to more than 200 millimetres of rain for coastal areas since it began earlier this week.

Environment Canada says that by 5 p.m. Tuesday, the Kennedy Lake Highway Station on Vancouver Island had recorded almost 223 millimetres of rainfall, while Estevan Point had reported 201 millimetres by 8 a.m. that day.

Other locations that have seen heavy rain since Sunday include Ucluelet and Tofino on Vancouver Island, Port Melon in the Howe Sound and Burnaby Mountain in Metro Vancouver.

The same weather event has also dumped 38 centimetres of snow further north on the community of Terrace, as well as 42 centimetres in Stewart near the Alaska border and 33 centimetres further inland in Blue River.

Western Vancouver Island and B.C.'s central coast remain under an elevated orange-level rainfall warning, while a lesser rain warning is in effect for inland Vancouver Island, the northern regions of Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley.

A flood watch by B.C.'s River Forecast Centre also remains in place for the central coastal regions of the province, including Bella Bella and Bella Coola.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chad Hipolito

MORE National ARTICLES

First Nations group questions audit that found $34M in questionable spending

First Nations group questions audit that found $34M in questionable spending
The Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations responded to the results of a recent forensic audit saying it has a robust system of financial management, accountability and transparency, but that processes during the probe hindered the organization's ability to provide relevant information. 

First Nations group questions audit that found $34M in questionable spending

B.C. Conservative staffer fired for calling Reconciliation Day flag a 'disgrace'

B.C. Conservative staffer fired for calling Reconciliation Day flag a 'disgrace'
Lindsay Shepherd says in a post on the social media platform X that Conservative Leader John Rustad fired her Wednesday over her remark about the raising of the flag at the provincial legislature in Victoria last week.

B.C. Conservative staffer fired for calling Reconciliation Day flag a 'disgrace'

Israeli envoy says communications with Ottawa have 'deteriorated' under Carney

Israeli envoy says communications with Ottawa have 'deteriorated' under Carney
Carney said in July his government would formally recognize a State of Palestine. Moed said his embassy "tried to reach out to the government and convey our position on recognition," before that but the outreach was unsuccessful.

Israeli envoy says communications with Ottawa have 'deteriorated' under Carney

Former Vancouver police officer awarded $30,000 after years-long grievance process

Former Vancouver police officer awarded $30,000 after years-long grievance process
Arbitrator Corinn Bell wrote that the sexual assault was the "tragic background" to the officer's complaints, but the grievance was not "directly" related to the assault. 

Former Vancouver police officer awarded $30,000 after years-long grievance process

Liberals roll out new Defence Investment Agency to speed up military purchasing

Liberals roll out new Defence Investment Agency to speed up military purchasing
The Liberal government is appointing former Royal Bank of Canada executive and former Goldman Sachs manager Doug Guzman as the CEO of the new agency, which will be housed within Public Services and Procurement Canada.

Liberals roll out new Defence Investment Agency to speed up military purchasing

Budget watchdog reports sharp improvement in home affordability — but not everywhere

Budget watchdog reports sharp improvement in home affordability — but not everywhere
Interim Parliamentary Budget Officer Jason Jacques put out an updated housing report Thursday. The report gauges affordability based on the gap between average home prices and what the typical household can afford.

Budget watchdog reports sharp improvement in home affordability — but not everywhere