Sunday, March 22, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. River Forecast Centre says rivers receding after multi-day deluge

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Mar, 2026 04:44 PM
  • B.C. River Forecast Centre says rivers receding after multi-day deluge

Residents of British Columbia's south coast are breathing easier with the return of blue skies after several days of heavy rains that triggered flood advisories.

The B.C. River Forecast Centre issued a bulletin Saturday saying rivers across the region were receding following peaks that mostly reached "modest" levels.

The multi-day atmospheric river weather system prompted a state of local emergency in the Fraser Valley Regional District as waters rose in the Chilliwack River, where an evacuation alert remains in effect for 30 homes, while in Coquitlam, eight residents were evacuated by helicopter due to a mudslide on Thursday.

In Chilliwack, district official Patti MacAhonic said the area did not see heavy rain overnight Friday and she hadn't heard from anyone needing help on Saturday.

She said the water level in a creek on her property that overflowed its banks had subsided, though she encouraged residents to continue monitoring local information channels over the weekend.

"Depending on the weather, if it got really warm, then we could get a little more flow," said MacAhonic, the district director for the Chilliwack River Valley area.

"But I think we're lucky."

The B.C. River Forecast Centre downgraded a flood watch for the province's south coast Saturday, replacing it with a lower-level high streamflow advisory.

A bulletin from the centre said the atmospheric river brought a range of 40 to 300 millimetres of precipitation to the region before easing Friday, with the heaviest rainfall recorded around Howe Sound, the Coast Mountains, Metro Vancouver's North Shore mountains and the Fraser Valley.

Environment Canada's weather summary for B.C. on Friday shows Coquitlam saw 151 millimetres of rain from 5 a.m. Wednesday to 4 p.m. Friday, the highest total recorded in Metro Vancouver over those days.

While snow initially fell in mid- and high-elevation areas, the centre said warming temperatures led to snowmelt and run-off later in the week. Automated weather stations recorded net snow water equivalent losses of 20 to 100 millimetres Monday to Saturday, the bulletin said.

The return of cooler temperatures has since reduced run-off, it said.

East of Chilliwack, crews were set to begin work Saturday repairing potholes that formed along Highway 1 during the heavy rain.

The B.C. Transportation Ministry issued a statement asking drivers to obey signage and slow down around road crews. Intermittent lane closures were expected during the repair work between Bridal Falls and Hope, it said.

Along with the south coast, high streamflow advisories were in effect for the Lillooet River near Pemberton and the Fraser Valley, Skagit and Similkameen regions.

The Avalanche Canada map warned the risk of slides remained considerable in the mountains around Squamish, Whistler and Pemberton, and along B.C.'s boundary with Alberta from the province's southeast to northeast of Prince George.

In B.C.'s southern Interior, meanwhile, Environment Canada figures show several communities saw their warmest March 20 on record.

In the Salmon Arm area, the temperature of 20 C broke a 112-year-old record, with the previous daily high temperature of 16.7 C recorded in 1914.

The mercury hit 22 C in Penticton, where the last record of 17.8 C was set in 1928.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout - Patti MacAhonic (Mandatory Credit)

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada will maintain Russian oil sanctions, despite 30-day U.S. pause: Carney

Canada will maintain Russian oil sanctions, despite 30-day U.S. pause: Carney
Canada will maintain its sanctions on Russia and its shadow fleet of oil transports, despite U.S. President Donald Trump's move to ease sanctions, Prime Minister Mark Carney said on Friday.

Canada will maintain Russian oil sanctions, despite 30-day U.S. pause: Carney

Unemployment rate up, 84,000 jobs lost in 'very bad' February jobs report

Unemployment rate up, 84,000 jobs lost in 'very bad' February jobs report
Statistics Canada said the economy faced sharp job losses in February in a report that suggests the labour market is struggling after nearly a year of U.S. tariff pressures.

Unemployment rate up, 84,000 jobs lost in 'very bad' February jobs report

'We're ready to defend the Arctic,' Carney says alongside German, Norwegian leaders

'We're ready to defend the Arctic,' Carney says alongside German, Norwegian leaders
Canada and its allies are prepared to defend the Arctic, Prime Minister Mark Carney said Friday in Bardufoss, Norway, after observing NATO’s Cold Response exercises.

'We're ready to defend the Arctic,' Carney says alongside German, Norwegian leaders

Conservative leader says his plan is 'the only hope' for Canada's auto industry

Conservative leader says his plan is 'the only hope' for Canada's auto industry
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre says he's planning to pitch a "realistic proposal" to end U.S. tariffs on the Canadian auto industry this weekend.

Conservative leader says his plan is 'the only hope' for Canada's auto industry

Carney travelling to Yellowknife, Norway for defence-focused northern trip

Carney travelling to Yellowknife, Norway for defence-focused northern trip
Prime Minister Mark Carney is again heading overseas, this time to Norway to observe NATO Cold Response exercises as Canada deepens ties with Nordic countries.

Carney travelling to Yellowknife, Norway for defence-focused northern trip

Bill would ease police, spy service access to online subscriber info

Bill would ease police, spy service access to online subscriber info
Newly proposed legislation would make it easier for police and Canada's spy service to investigate online activities.

Bill would ease police, spy service access to online subscriber info