Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Extent of damage complicates B.C. highway repairs

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Nov, 2021 11:53 AM
  • Extent of damage complicates B.C. highway repairs

Repairing the British Columbia highways washed out by heavy rains and flooding will be complicated by the scale of the damage, the terrain and the coming winter, building experts say.

"It's unprecedented, the size and scope and the number of sites," said Joe Wrobel, the president of JPW Road and Bridge, a road-building company based in the north Okanagan area of B.C.

Despite the extent of the damage, Wrobel, whose company is not directly involved in the repairs related to the flooding, said there are processes in place for emergency repairs, adding that the B.C. government has already drawn up lists of available contractors and equipment.

Before work can begin, geotechnical assessments will have to be conducted, Wrobel said in an interview Wednesday. Protecting lives will be the first priority, followed by protecting infrastructure and restoring safe travel, he added.

Brenda McCabe, the president of the Canadian Society for Civil Engineering and a civil engineering professor emerita at the University of Toronto, said officials must first ensure repairs can be done safely. "We have to make sure that the slopes that are left are stable, that crews can get into there in a safe way," she said in an interview Wednesday.

In areas where roads have been washed away, engineers and officials will have to decide whether to rebuild the damaged infrastructure or use new designs — decisions that she said will likely be made on a case-by-case basis.

"Our parameters for design are evolving with our better understanding of the way that the climate is changing and the impacts that that will have on weather events," she said.

Every major route between the Lower Mainland and the Interior has been cut by washouts, flooding or landslides following record-breaking rainfall across southern B.C. between Saturday and Monday.

How long repairs will take will depend on the damage, said Ahmad Rteil, a professor of structural engineering at the University of British Columbia's Okanagan campus.

In places where whole sections of road have been washed away, just assessing the damage and the stability of the soil could take more than two weeks, he said in an interview Wednesday.

"You have to reassess the whole situation there in terms of the soil, stabilize the soil, and then once you figure that one out, you start building the new road, the new bridge," Rteil said.

Winter — and freezing weather — will make repairs more difficult, he added.

"As the temperature now starts to go below zero and starts to freeze, then it becomes very challenging to work with that upper layer of soil," he said, adding that it will also make bringing heavy equipment over mountain passes more difficult.

Rteil said he worries events like this will become more common in the future. He said the wildfires and high heat in B.C. earlier this summer killed trees and added to the risk of washouts. "When the vegetation on that slope is gone, then the slope becomes unstable," he said.

Repairing roads where debris has come down from above will likely be relatively straightforward, while in other places, temporary bridges and detours may need to be put in place while major work is done, Wrobel said. Areas where roads have been flooded and the water table has risen will likely be the most complicated, he added.

Wrobel, a former chairman of the Canadian Construction Association, said that the number of repairs required will add to the complexity, and he said provincial officials will have to decide which projects are given top priority. He said road builders from across the country are ready to do the work.

Over his career of more than 40 years, he has seen projects where the damage was as bad as what individual sites in B.C. are experiencing this week. "But I've never seen them all at the same time," he said.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

59 COVID19 cases for Thursday

59 COVID19 cases for Thursday
78.4% (3,635,811) of eligible people 12 and older in B.C. have received their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine and 40.0% (1,854,387) received their second dose.

59 COVID19 cases for Thursday

COVID vaccines still work against mutant, researchers find

COVID vaccines still work against mutant, researchers find
New research from France adds to evidence that widely used COVID-19 vaccines still offer strong protection against a coronavirus mutant that is spreading rapidly around the world and now is the most prevalent variant in the U.S.

COVID vaccines still work against mutant, researchers find

Jody Wilson-Raybould not seeking re-election

Jody Wilson-Raybould not seeking re-election
Independent MP Jody Wilson-Raybould will not seek re-election in the next federal campaign, saying in a letter to her constituents on Thursday that Parliament has become "toxic and ineffective" during her time in politics.

Jody Wilson-Raybould not seeking re-election

Canada monitoring 'whole slew' of variants: Tam

Canada monitoring 'whole slew' of variants: Tam
Tam says the Lambda variant first identified in Peru has been confirmed in 11 Canadian cases to date, but adds it's too early to know how widespread it is or what impact it could have.

Canada monitoring 'whole slew' of variants: Tam

PBO: Extending pandemic jobs program to cost $600M

PBO: Extending pandemic jobs program to cost $600M
Most of the extra spending, about $404 million, will take place in this fiscal year under the costing estimate the budget office put out today, with $174 million next year and a final $15 million the year after that.

PBO: Extending pandemic jobs program to cost $600M

Ottawa, B.C. reach deal on child-care funding

Ottawa, B.C. reach deal on child-care funding
Trudeau says the agreement stipulates Ottawa will work with the province to reach an average of $10-per-day child care in regulated spaces for children under six years old before 2027.

Ottawa, B.C. reach deal on child-care funding