Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

First the flooding, now the cleanup in B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Dec, 2021 10:48 AM
  • First the flooding, now the cleanup in B.C.

ABBOTSFORD, B.C. - Unprecedented flooding in southwestern British Columbia has left hard-hit communities dealing with the disposal of debris like drywall, insulation, silt-soaked mattresses, couches and kitchen cupboards damaged by water that gutted homes and businesses.

Lia Bergen, who lives in the Sumas Prairie area of Abbotsford, returned to her home nearly two weeks after an evacuation order from a trio of powerful storms last month to discover the destruction of furniture, two freezers, a fridge, two cars, and her husband's heavy-duty work tools.

Some of the items have been carted away by volunteers, including members of the University of the Fraser Valley women's basketball team, which showed up at her door and helped retrieve keepsakes from a crawl space, she said. The list of belongings stored there included letters from Bergen's grandmother and a crib her father made for her now 29-year-old son, later used by two younger children. It's too damaged to be passed on to her soon-to-be born grandchild.

"In the barn, we have a tractor and three riding lawn mowers, so I'm not exactly sure how we're going to dispose of that," she said.

Abbotsford Mayor Henry Braun said a second waste transfer station is expected to open for "mountains" of trash left outside homes after record rainfall killed thousands of livestock and devastated a prime agricultural area of the province.

"There's just a monumental amount of debris that we have to collect and dispose of in order for people to get back into their homes and their businesses, their barns," Braun said.

Items including 30-metre logs, bales of hay, wood pallets, propane and fuel tanks as well as uprooted sheds and vegetable stands have ended up in ditches along 190 kilometres of roads, he said. The ditches are used as part of a system to irrigate crops.

"We have to get all of this junk out of the ditches because we're not through the rainy season yet so the water can actually drain out to the Barrowtown (pump) station or the Sumas Canal in a way that doesn't reflood some of these farms."

The Sumas and Matsqui prairies of Abbotsford make up Canada's top agricultural-producing jurisdiction per hectare, Braun said, adding about 50 per cent of the dairy and poultry consumed by British Columbians comes from the area, where the recovery effort could take years.

Residents of Merritt and Princeton are also clearing debris.

Greg Lowis, information officer at the emergency operations centre in Merritt, said contractors with the regional district are collecting and disposing of debris at the local landfill.

He said items left at the curbside must be separated in accordance with environmental standards into four categories, including wood and large building material; metal, mattresses and appliances; food waste; and drywall and asbestos-containing materials.

Mud and soil that was piled onto lawns must be taken to a new facility at the local airport.

"There's obviously concerns about contamination and safety, so we're doing testing on the clay and the soil to see whether or not it's safe to dispose in our (landfill) in Lower Nicola," Lowis said.

Princeton Mayor Spencer Coyne said the city of 3,000 in the Similkameen region has its own landfill contracted bins for trash from a local company.

Homes were filled with over two metres of water, destroying hardwood flooring in century-old houses, with much of it laid atop layers of shiplap and covered with linoleum or carpet, creating even more garbage, Coyne said.

He's eager to learn how much of the $5-billion contribution for disaster relief promised by the federal government will be going to small communities.

"I'd like to see our fair share of that come straight to the municipality to help for not only the rebuild, but the recovery of our community," Coyne said, adding that the city expects to spend about $2 million of its money.

"That doesn't sound like a lot of money, but in order for us to raise that, we have to have a 67.5 per cent tax increase for our residents to pay for that next year."

The Environment Ministry said in an emailed statement that recovery and debris management work will involve contractors, non-governmental organizations and a specialized contingent of BC Wildfire Service crews.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

COVID-19 infections close B.C. school

COVID-19 infections close B.C. school
Online learning will be offered until the school's expected reopening on Oct. 4. The Ministry of Health reported 759 new cases of COVID-19 in B.C. on Wednesday, with 5,458 active cases provincewide.

COVID-19 infections close B.C. school

Man charged in Vernon, B.C., homicide

Man charged in Vernon, B.C., homicide
RCMP say they responded to reports of shooting near Vernon and discovered a man's body at the scene. They say a man was arrested later the same day near Armstrong, B.C.

Man charged in Vernon, B.C., homicide

759 COVID19 cases for Wednesday

759 COVID19 cases for Wednesday
There are 5,458 active cases of COVID-19 in the province and 173,215 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 324 individuals are in hospital and 157 are in intensive care. The remaining people are recovering at home in self-isolation.

759 COVID19 cases for Wednesday

Vaccine deliveries paused because of oversupply

Vaccine deliveries paused because of oversupply
Canada was to get 95 million doses of vaccine from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna by the end of September, but is about 20 million doses shy of that as of Wednesday.

Vaccine deliveries paused because of oversupply

Better B.C. wildfire links will save lives: report

Better B.C. wildfire links will save lives: report
The report from Thompson Rivers University in Kamloops, B.C., makes six recommendations, including ensuring remote and Indigenous communities have robust communications systems in place where emergency officials can relay fast and accurate information about wildfires.

Better B.C. wildfire links will save lives: report

Liberals need to move on fiscal plan, expert says

Liberals need to move on fiscal plan, expert says
Former parliamentary budget officer Kevin Page says the Liberals may want to release the document in November and use it to introduce some spending and tax measures.

Liberals need to move on fiscal plan, expert says