Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Highway 97 To Reopen West Of Chetwynd, B.C., Following Severe Floods

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jun, 2016 10:23 AM
    VICTORIA — A major stretch of highway in northeastern B.C. from Mackenzie Junction to Chetwynd is set to reopen, one week after it was closed by severe flooding.
     
    Transportation Minister Todd Stone advises drivers to expect single lane alternating traffic along the nearly 150-kilometre stretch of Highway 97.
     
    He says pilot cars may be needed to lead convoys through some sections of the corridor and motorists should expect the trip to take longer than the usual 90 minutes.
     
    Crews have been working on the route and others in the Peace region since last week when at least 100 millimetres of rain tore up roads, washed out bridges and train tracks, and damaged buildings around Chetwynd and Dawson Creek.
     
     
    Stone says nearly 200 pieces of equipment have been assigned to restore the flooded routes. 
     
    Traffic is moving on Highway 2 south of Dawson Creek and Highway 29 north of Chetwynd, while single-lane travel is also possible on 21 of 40 washed out side roads.
     
    Highway 97 was scheduled to reopen early Thursday afternoon.
     
    "This is important for the local residents who've been cut off from their communities for several days after the unprecedented rainstorm that severely damaged whole sections of the highway and washed away a number of side roads," Stone says in a news release.
     
     
    Supplies have been flown in to about 60 families living west of Chetwynd since last week's flooding cut access to their properties.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Trouble At The Ticket Booth: Hip Shows Illustrate Problems Faced By Concertgoers

    Trouble At The Ticket Booth: Hip Shows Illustrate Problems Faced By Concertgoers
    TORONTO — Olivia Chessman has carefully laid out her attack plan for buying Tragically Hip concert tickets on Friday when the public sale begins.

    Trouble At The Ticket Booth: Hip Shows Illustrate Problems Faced By Concertgoers

    Some Say The Fate Of British Columbia's Old-Growth Forests Rests In The Balance

    Some Say The Fate Of British Columbia's Old-Growth Forests Rests In The Balance
    SAANICH, B.C. — The Douglas fir Andy MacKinnon leans against is 40 metres tall. It's likely more than 500 years old and its fire-scarred trunk is almost two metres in diameter.

    Some Say The Fate Of British Columbia's Old-Growth Forests Rests In The Balance

    Gender-Confirming Surgery Now Covered For Transgender People In New Brunswick

    Gender-Confirming Surgery Now Covered For Transgender People In New Brunswick
    Health Minister Victor Boudreau says it's time, because New Brunswick is the last province in the country to provide the coverage.

    Gender-Confirming Surgery Now Covered For Transgender People In New Brunswick

    Six New And Expanded Residential Care Facilities Planned For B.C.

    Six New And Expanded Residential Care Facilities Planned For B.C.
      Vancouver Coastal Health says the agreements are part of a $40-million, 10-year strategy that will see expansions at a significant number of the region's residential care facilities.

    Six New And Expanded Residential Care Facilities Planned For B.C.

    Justin Trudeau To Speak To Federation Of Canadian Municipalities Conference

    Justin Trudeau To Speak To Federation Of Canadian Municipalities Conference
    WINNIPEG — Justin Trudeau will speak to Canada's mayors and councillors today.

    Justin Trudeau To Speak To Federation Of Canadian Municipalities Conference

    'Deaths Of Despair' Drag Life Expectancy Lower For Whites

    'Deaths Of Despair' Drag Life Expectancy Lower For Whites
    Rising drug and alcohol overdoses, suicides, and disease from chronic alcoholism — labeled "deaths of despair" by one expert — are cutting the lives of white Americans short by nearly a half a year on average.

    'Deaths Of Despair' Drag Life Expectancy Lower For Whites