Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Ottawa's spring floods put last round of repairs to the test

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Jun, 2019 06:25 PM

    A new round of repairs is in store for pathways around Parliament Hill, after the second major flood in three years.

    Water levels on the Ottawa River remain a metre above normal and crews working for the National Capital Commission are just beginning to assess the damage to infrastructure near the Ottawa River.

    The Crown corporation responsible for federal land in the capital region — including along the Ottawa River and the Rideau Canal, 24 Sussex Drive and Rideau Hall — spent about $6 million on repairs after the last flood, keeping some popular tourist paths closed for many months for extensive reconstruction.

    Some repairs to pathways on the Quebec side of the river weren't finished by the time the second damaging flood came this spring.

    "Cleanup has already begun, inspections have begun, so we're hoping to reopen them as soon as possible. We're hoping it's not going to take a year for these," said Dominique Huras, a spokesperson for the commission.

    Some social-media images from a river pathway in Gatineau, Que., across from Parliament show warped and washed-out asphalt, which Huras said was from an incompletely repaired portion of the pathway.

    She said artificial rock formations installed along the river to protect against erosion after flooding two years ago seem to have held, at least along that portion of the pathway. But the rocks may not be the key factor in determining how much repair the area will need.

    "That's not the resilient part of it, it's the vegetation that's there that's supposed to absorb and protect," Huras said. "The problem is that vegetation takes about three to four years to sink its roots so that it won't get washed away."

    The three stages of repairs and upgrades the NCC undertook on pathways near the river gives them an opportunity to see how their higher standards withstood this year's flooding, Huras said. The NCC will get to see how repairs and modifications completed in 2016 or 2017 fared versus more recent work.

    Huras said any money needed for new fixes to projects that hadn't been completed will likely come out of the same pool of $55 million the federal government granted the commission in 2018 to repair and maintain major infrastructure, which included work on the previous year's flood damage. Repairing other damage will require money from other commission funds or new appropriations from the federal government.

    Like authorities elsewhere, Huras said the commission is learning it can no longer treat extreme events like flooding as "exceptional."

    "We're looking at the whole process as this will be a reoccurrence. We're not seeing it as a one-in-100-year flood any more," Huras said.

    The president of an Ottawa cycling organization said Wednesday that she hopes the commission will get the capacity to plan for more extreme weather.

    "These last couple of events have been extreme. I think it shows we aren't really resourcing the NCC sufficiently to keep up with the changing climate," said Heather Shearer.

    She said the pathways are extremely popular with cyclists and others, and they bring "vibrancy" to the capital city.

    "I think we've had a couple of exceptional years, but I am concerned that this is something we're going to see in the future and we have to be ready for it," Shearer said.

    Note to readers: This is a corrected story. An earlier version said repairs would be paid for out of $55 million earmarked for National Capital Commission infrastructure work, including repairs after the 2017 flood. In fact, that money will only pay for some of the necessary work.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Quebec Premier Asks MNAs Not To Fund Events Promoting Canada, Sovereignty

    QUEBEC — The Quebec government is telling members of the legislature they cannot use their discretionary budgets to support events that promote federalism or sovereignty.

    Quebec Premier Asks MNAs Not To Fund Events Promoting Canada, Sovereignty

    Cancer-Causing Substance Used To Cut Cocaine Turns Up In Nelson, B.C., Drugs

    NELSON, B.C. — Police in Nelson, B.C., have issued a public safety warning after learning suspected cocaine had been cut with a potentially cancer-causing substance.

    Cancer-Causing Substance Used To Cut Cocaine Turns Up In Nelson, B.C., Drugs

    Quebec Cattle Farmers Want Beyond Meat To Stop Marketing Itself As Plant-Based Meat

    MONTREAL — Cattle producers across the country are backing Quebec colleagues who have filed a complaint over a popular new meatless burger that is being advertised as "plant-based meat."

    Quebec Cattle Farmers Want Beyond Meat To Stop Marketing Itself As Plant-Based Meat

    More Than 100 People Fall Sick In Suspected Norovirus Outbreak In B.C. Hotels

    More Than 100 People Fall Sick In Suspected Norovirus Outbreak In B.C. Hotels
    VANCOUVER — Over 100 people have fallen sick following a suspected norovirus outbreak at two Vancouver-area hotels over the weekend.

    More Than 100 People Fall Sick In Suspected Norovirus Outbreak In B.C. Hotels

    Feds 'Deeply Concerned' By China's Arrests Of Canadians Kovrig, Spavor

    Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says the government is "deeply concerned" about China's decision to formally arrest two Canadians citizens it has been holding since December.

    Feds 'Deeply Concerned' By China's Arrests Of Canadians Kovrig, Spavor

    Canada Introducing Digital Charter To Combat Hate Speech, Misinformation

    Canada Introducing Digital Charter To Combat Hate Speech, Misinformation
    PARIS — A new digital charter will dictate how the country will combat hate speech, misinformation and online electoral interference in Canada, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told a technology conference in Paris on Thursday.

    Canada Introducing Digital Charter To Combat Hate Speech, Misinformation