Friday, February 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

Rain And Wind Hammer B.C. South Coast Prompting Swollen Rivers And A Mudslide

The Canadian Press, 11 Dec, 2014 11:09 PM
    QUALICUM BEACH, B.C. — Torrential rain and strong winds carried by a series of weather systems have hammered British Columbia's south coast and more is to come.
     
    The heavy rains have saturated the ground and swelled rivers, prompting a mudslide that rolled over a Vancouver Island home. Flood warnings or high-river advisories have also been issued for residents living along numerous waterways.
     
    Fifteen homes in a neighbourhood above the Little Qualicum River have been evacuated and another 70 are on evacuation alert after a wall of mud partially buried a two-storey home with a man inside on Wednesday.
     
    Fire crews used a chainsaw to free the man who was trapped inside the basement of his home, said Fire Chief Nick Acciavatti in the community of Dashwood.
     
    An emergency reception centre has been set up nearby for those residents who aren't allowed back to their homes.
     
    Geoff Garbutt, a general manager for the Regional District of Nanaimo, said a geotechnical engineer was heading to the site to assess the slope Thursday. 
     
     
    The neighbourhood above the river was built on a former timber cut block, Garbutt said.
     
    "We've had a lot of rain and there are some steep slopes there," he said, adding officials are focused on keeping track of what's happening in the area.
     
    Garbutt said the Little Qualicum River is like many other rivers in the area — swollen to near overflowing.
     
    The B.C. River Forecast Centre has issued flood watches for the four major rivers on Vancouver's North Shore, the Squamish River and on Howe Sound.
     
    High streamflow advisories are up for numerous rivers in the Lower Mainland, the Fraser Valley and along the Sea-To-Sky corridor from Horseshoe Bay to Whistler.
     
    An evacuation order and alert for residents in the Vancouver Island City of Courtenay was lifted Thursday after officials warned residents earlier in the week that three rivers in the area might flow over their banks.
     
    Also on Thursday in the same area, the Comox Valley Regional District issued a boil water advisory for thousands of residents.
     
     
     
    "Due to the intense rainfall experienced over the last several days, turbidity levels have risen in both Comox Lake and the Puntledge River," the advisory said.
     
    Users, especially those with compromised immune systems, were advised to boil their drinking water for at least one minute.
     
    Environment Canada meteorologist Jennifer Hay said the three days of wet weather have been a "fairly extreme event."
     
    And there's more rain and wind to come.
     
    "We're thinking that this (system) is less wet," she said of the pending storm.
     
    But Hay said the cumulative affect of more precipitation is being felt.
     
    "It's the sustained impact of the ongoing weather and wind and some melting snow, combined with high rivers and high tides. We are starting to see some impacts."
     
    Port Alberni, on central Vancouver Island, was pounded during the first two storms, getting hit with 190.8 millimetres of rain over a two-day period starting Monday. 
     
     
    North Courtenay, Howe Sound and Powell River all received more than 100 millimetres of rain during the same period.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada's clean energy sector growing quickly as investment jumps: study

    Canada's clean energy sector growing quickly as investment jumps: study
    OTTAWA — Canadian investments in clean energy totalled $6.5 billion last year, a 45 per cent increase from 2012, according to a new study released Tuesday.

    Canada's clean energy sector growing quickly as investment jumps: study

    Senators seek to spur national debate on assisted suicide with proposed new law

    Senators seek to spur national debate on assisted suicide with proposed new law
    OTTAWA — Thwarted in his efforts to force the House of Commons to debate the issue of assisted suicide, Manitoba Conservative MP Stephen Fletcher has gone down the hall for some help.

    Senators seek to spur national debate on assisted suicide with proposed new law

    Social security tribunal backlog includes terminally ill, others deep in debt

    Social security tribunal backlog includes terminally ill, others deep in debt
    OTTAWA — Terminal cancer patients, organ-transplant recipients and suicidal, debt-addled Canadians are among the 11,000 people waiting to have their appeals heard by Ottawa's badly backlogged social security tribunal.

    Social security tribunal backlog includes terminally ill, others deep in debt

    NDP, Liberals demand Fantino resign from Veterans Affairs portfolio

    NDP, Liberals demand Fantino resign from Veterans Affairs portfolio
    OTTAWA — Julian Fantino was greeted Monday in the House of Commons by opposition demands that he step down — but how much of a political liability the veterans affairs minister may be for the Conservative government remains to be seen.

    NDP, Liberals demand Fantino resign from Veterans Affairs portfolio

    Report of abduction of Israeli-Canadian soldier may be false: government source

    Report of abduction of Israeli-Canadian soldier may be false: government source
    OTTAWA — The federal government is now working on the assumption that the reported abduction of an Israeli-Canadian woman by Islamic militants may in fact be false, The Canadian Press has learned.  

    Report of abduction of Israeli-Canadian soldier may be false: government source

    Ontario Man Arrested In 1970s Murders Of Two B.C. Girls

    Ontario Man Arrested In 1970s Murders Of Two B.C. Girls
    VANCOUVER — Shari Greer made a promise to her 11-year-old daughter as she grieved over the girl's grave site that she would never give up the hunt for the killer.

    Ontario Man Arrested In 1970s Murders Of Two B.C. Girls