Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

Local state of emergency declared over risk of dam in B.C. Interior bursting

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Oct, 2025 10:11 AM
  • Local state of emergency declared over risk of dam in B.C. Interior bursting

A regional district in the British Columbia Interior has declared a state of local emergency as an illegal dam threatens to burst.

The Thompson-Nicola Regional District has already issued an evacuation alert for 14 properties down river from the dam and says the emergency declaration will allow it to take action to mitigate the flood risk.

The district said on Tuesday that the unauthorized, man-made dam on Fadear Lake could fail and create "an uncontrolled release of water" into Fadear Creek in an area about 13 kilometres north of Sun Peaks Mountain. 

Residents in homes along Fadear Creek were told on Monday to be ready to leave quickly due to the possible “imminent” failure of the dam.

The district says the local state of emergency is in place for the Lower North Thompson area, north of Kamloops. 

It says the declaration allow authorities to use emergency powers to order residents from their homes, to stop travel and allow them to enter private lands when lives or properties are at risk.

"This declaration enables prompt co-ordination of action or special regulation of persons or property to protect the health, safety, or welfare of people or to limit damage to property," said a statement from the district. 

Colton Davies, a spokesman for Thompson-Nicola Regional District, said on Tuesday the dam is at the north end of Fadear Lake where it drains into Fadear Creek. 

Davies said a couple of culverts within the dam have been blocked, causing the lake level to rise, sparking concerns that the water will spill over the top of the dam. 

He said it's unclear who built the dam. 

The Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship said in a statement on Tuesday that the top priority is keeping people safe, and an engineer was contracted to assess the situation and prepare a plan for next steps.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada Post urges union to revisit offers, says gap between parties is 'substantial'

Canada Post urges union to revisit offers, says gap between parties is 'substantial'
The Crown corporation says the union has "maintained or hardened" its position on many items and added new demands and that the gap between the parties remains "substantial."

Canada Post urges union to revisit offers, says gap between parties is 'substantial'

Two bodies were missed at B.C. death scene. Was treatment of coroners to blame?

Two bodies were missed at B.C. death scene. Was treatment of coroners to blame?
The coroner had missed the bodies for a very simple reason: they did not attend in person.

Two bodies were missed at B.C. death scene. Was treatment of coroners to blame?

Uncertainty reigns in Kanesatake nearly one month after cancelled election

Uncertainty reigns in Kanesatake nearly one month after cancelled election
On Tuesday, the Mohawk Council of Kanesatake filed a statement of claim asking the Federal Court to declare that Simon and four other council chiefs remain in office until a new election can be held. 

Uncertainty reigns in Kanesatake nearly one month after cancelled election

Law advocates slam Ottawa for silence on Trump sanctioning Canadian ICC judge

Law advocates slam Ottawa for silence on Trump sanctioning Canadian ICC judge
The U.S. State Department also sanctioned citizens of France, Fiji and Senegal over their role in the ICC's investigation of Israel's actions in Gaza and the West Bank.

Law advocates slam Ottawa for silence on Trump sanctioning Canadian ICC judge

Smith's Alberta Next panel hears cheers for deportation, separation in Lloydminster

Smith's Alberta Next panel hears cheers for deportation, separation in Lloydminster
Smith's panel, which is touring the province to hear from the public on ways to shield the province from federal overreach, drew a friendly crowd of about 350 to a public recreation centre Wednesday night.

Smith's Alberta Next panel hears cheers for deportation, separation in Lloydminster

Poll suggests 85% of Canadians want governments to regulate AI

Poll suggests 85% of Canadians want governments to regulate AI
The Leger poll found 85 per cent of respondents believe governments should regulate AI tools to ensure ethical and safe use. More than half, 57 per cent, said they strongly agreed with that statement.

Poll suggests 85% of Canadians want governments to regulate AI