Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Heavy Rains Cause Floods In Northeastern B.C., Damaging Rail Lines, Bridges

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jun, 2016 01:28 PM
    VANCOUVER — Heavy rains in several northeastern British Columbia communities have washed out roads, prompted flood watches, forced some evacuations and led to one declaration of local emergency.
     
    Mayor Merlin Nichols of Chetwynd issued the declaration Wednesday after about 100 mm of rain drenched the town of about 3,000 people, 100 kilometres west of Dawson Creek.
     
    Nichols says the community's industrial area just north of town is hardest hit, with the railway washed out and damage to buildings caused by the flooding of Winter Creek.
     
    Dawson Creek Mayor Dale Bumstead says his city has been cut in half by the waterway that divides the town, with residents from several properties forced to higher ground as a number of bridges and culverts have been damaged or destroyed.
     
     
    DriveBC reports washouts or closures on Highways 97, 52 and 29, affecting Chetwynd and Dawson Creek, and the River Forecast Centre notes flood watches are posted there and for waterways near Pine Pass, Tumbler Ridge, Fort St. John and Fort Nelson.
     
    Environment Canada says rainfall warnings are up for the northeastern corner of the province, with another 20 mm expected before sunshine returns.  
     
    "We are in a very serious situation this morning in our city," says Bumstead in a Facebook message posted early Thursday as at least one Dawson Creek bridge was washed away by raging waters.
     
    "The north side of town and south side are now separated," he says, although he posted a further message on social media advising an ambulance route could serve both sides of the city via a rural road ringing Dawson Creek.
     
    Downpours had faded to showers west of Dawson Creek by early Thursday, prompting optimism from Nichols.
     
     
    "Unless the weather takes another turn for the worse, we should be able to start our recovery," he says of the situation in Chetwynd.
     
    "There's a couple of (bridges) that are in danger, but so far we haven't lost anything. Our focus right now, since the rain has diminished, is mainly on cleanup and restoring."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    City of Surrey Unveils Progressive Sustainability Charter 2.0

    City of Surrey Unveils Progressive Sustainability Charter 2.0
    The refreshed and updated document acts as a roadmap to grow the city with a viable sustainable vision with a focus and sensitivity to long-term impacts.

    City of Surrey Unveils Progressive Sustainability Charter 2.0

    Bard On The Beach Shakespeare Festival’s 27th Season

    Bard On The Beach Shakespeare Festival’s 27th Season

      Vancouver’s Bard on the Beach Shakespeare Festival begins its 27th season in Van...

    Bard On The Beach Shakespeare Festival’s 27th Season

    Feds See Ontario Stance On CPP As Roadblock To Expanding Pension Plan

    OTTAWA — Federal sources say Canada's most populous province has become a roadblock in work to gain the required support from provinces to make reform and expand the Canada Pension Plan.

    Feds See Ontario Stance On CPP As Roadblock To Expanding Pension Plan

    British Columbia Government Handing $25 Million Back To Provincial School Districts

    British Columbia Government Handing $25 Million Back To Provincial School Districts
    All 60 B.C. school districts will receive some funds. 

    British Columbia Government Handing $25 Million Back To Provincial School Districts

    Teen Suspects Arrested In Assaults At Manitoba Addiction Treatment Centre

    Selkirk RCMP say a 16-year-old boy was taken into custody Monday evening and a 17-year-old boy was arrested early Tuesday morning.

    Teen Suspects Arrested In Assaults At Manitoba Addiction Treatment Centre

    B.C. Audit Says More Work Needed On Community Programs To Reduce Reoffending

    B.C. Audit Says More Work Needed On Community Programs To Reduce Reoffending
      Carol Bellringer looked at six of the eight recommendations and says B.C. Community Corrections has taken steps to implement only one of them.

    B.C. Audit Says More Work Needed On Community Programs To Reduce Reoffending