Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Rain Complicates Cleanup After Powerful Storm Rips Through Metro Vancouver

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Aug, 2015 10:14 AM
    VANCOUVER — Electricity is slowly being restored across Metro Vancouver two days after the region was battered by a powerful windstorm, but now the area is being drenched by heavy rain.
     
    A rainfall warning is in effect for Metro Vancouver, Howe Sound and the Fraser Valley with up to 80 millimetres expected in some areas, and the downpour could overwhelm debris-clogged drains, add to the woes of the estimated 60,000 customers still waiting for power.
     
    BC Hydro brought in crews from across the province to help restore outages that affected more than half-a-million customers at the height of the most destructive storm to hit the area in nearly a decade.
     
     
    More than 157,000 were still in the dark Sunday evening, but Hydro teams worked through the night to cut that number, although the utility estimates some residents in Surrey may not have power until late tonight.
     
    Officials in Vancouver warn it could take weeks for the city to fully clean up the mess from downed trees that, in some cases, ripped up pavement and damaged other infrastructure as the entire root ball was torn from the ground.
     
    The timing of the storm is also being blamed for some of the damage because high winds usually occur in the region during winter, but this storm happened when many trees still have full canopies of leaves, making them especially vulnerable.
     
    CLEAN-UP BEGINS IN WAKE OF SEVERE B.C. WINDSTORM, THOUSANDS STILL WITHOUT POWER
     
     
    Had Vancouver resident Sherrell Hutchingson been standing a foot to the side while opening her car door during Saturday's vicious windstorm it's unlikely she'd be able to tell her close-call story of a large tree narrowly missing her as it crushed her vehicle.
     
    "It was scary," said the soft-spoken woman, laughing nervously on the street outside her East Vancouver home. "It went right by my head.
     
    "It was like a big crack and the tree just snapped ... and fell right on my car."
     
    Hutchingson's experience was part of a myriad reported incidents of other smashed vehicles and wrecked roofs following a brutal windstorm that tore down trees and branches, wreaking havoc across southwestern British Columbia and leaving at its height an estimated 500,000 people without power.
     
     
    Eighty-kilometre-an-hour winds buffeted the Greater Vancouver Area, at one point toppling a tree onto a woman in her 40s who was walking with her daughter in Surrey. The RCMP described the woman's injuries as life-threatening.
     
    Sadhu Johnston, Vancouver's deputy city manager, described the scale of the storm as "unprecedented" and estimated it would take weeks for the city to fully clean up the debris.
     
    "This is probably one of the most intense storms that we've had over the past decade,"  he said during a news conference, while behind him city crews worked to remove fallen branches from the road.
     
    "I think the drought combined with the high winds really impacted us," he added. "The drought led to more trees coming down, which led to more power outages. So it kind of compounded."
     
     
    The cost of the extensive property damage and the bill for cleaning up the huge mess has yet to be tallied, he said.
     
    In terms of damage, park board official Brian Quinn said timing was the biggest contributing factor. Such high winds typically arrive in the fall or winter when the trees are bare, he explained.
     
    "This time of year with the canopies completely full of leaves, they act more as a wind sail and catch more of the wind," said Quinn.
     
    The bulk of the outages occurred in the Greater Vancouver Area, and BC Hydro said that as of early Monday morning about 90,000 customers were still waiting for the power to be restored.
     
    BC Hydro said it could take until Monday morning to bring some residents out of the dark, including neighbourhoods in Coquitlam, Surrey and Port Moody.
     
     
    The region's 911 line was overwhelmed with inquiries about power outages, prompting officials to ask residents to call only in the event of an urgent emergency.
     
    Metro Vancouver Regional District spokesman Rod Tulett said on Sunday that the district's emergency procedures had so far performed well. He described the weekend's gales as the backup system's biggest test since the district was caught off-guard by a windstorm in 2006 that battered the Lower Mainland and uprooted numerous trees in Vancouver's Stanley Park.
     
    "After the big windstorm a lot of our facilities received significant upgrades in their backup-power capability," said Tulett. "We learned from that."
     
     
    Residents took to social media with a mix of both praise and condemnation for BC Hydro and its response to the outages, with much of the vitriol directed toward the utility's website only working sporadically.
     
    The Greater Vancouver Zoo also suffered extensive damage in the storm, said the facility's general manager Jody Henderson. Powerful winds caused a number of major fences to come down, most notably the barricade surrounding the grizzly bear enclosure.
     
    "We followed our normal emergency protocol. ... Everyone was contained into a building," said Henderson about the incident. "At no time did our grizzly bear get out."
     
    Strong winds also swept through Rock Creek in the southern interior, where a 44-square-kilometre wildfire destroyed 30 homes earlier this month.
     
     
    The storm triggered wind warnings from Environment Canada, forced the temporary closure of Stanley Park, and slowed ferry service between Victoria and the mainland.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Journalist Penned Letter Alleging John Furlong Abused Over 40 Former Students: Court

    Former 2010 Games spokeswoman Renee Smith-Valade told B.C. Supreme Court that Laura Robinson passed her a letter during a chance encounter at a Toronto airport and claimed his alleged actions had resulted in at least one suicide.

    Journalist Penned Letter Alleging John Furlong Abused Over 40 Former Students: Court

    Canada Must Guard Against Terrorism: PM Harper

    Canada Must Guard Against Terrorism: PM Harper
    Harper made the remarks on Tuesday while laying a wreath in the Hall of Honour to mark the "National day of Remembrance for Victims of Terrorism" observed to honour those killed in the 1985 Air India bombing.

    Canada Must Guard Against Terrorism: PM Harper

    Woman Sexually Assaulted By David Pickton Broke Down After His Brother's Murder Arrest

    Woman Sexually Assaulted By David Pickton Broke Down After His Brother's Murder Arrest
    VANCOUVER — A woman who was sexually assaulted by David Pickton told a trial she had a mental breakdown and was hospitalized after learning the man's brother was an accused serial killer.

    Woman Sexually Assaulted By David Pickton Broke Down After His Brother's Murder Arrest

    Vancouver Becomes First In Canada To Regulate Medical Marijuana Dispensaries

    Vancouver Becomes First In Canada To Regulate Medical Marijuana Dispensaries
    In a eight to three vote, councillors approved imposing a $30,000 licensing fee, requiring stores to be located 300 metres from schools, community centres and each other, and banning shops from certain areas.

    Vancouver Becomes First In Canada To Regulate Medical Marijuana Dispensaries

    Search Underway For Hiker Duo Who Didn't Return From B.C.'s Southern Interior

    Search Underway For Hiker Duo Who Didn't Return From B.C.'s Southern Interior
    A search for Lynne Carmody and Rick Moynan began Monday near the village of Keremeos.  

    Search Underway For Hiker Duo Who Didn't Return From B.C.'s Southern Interior

    Newly Appointed B.C. Committee To Review Mining Rules After Tailings Pond Breach

    Bill Bennett says a committee will determine how to best enact seven recommendations from an expert report into last year's tailings pond breach in the Cariboo region.

    Newly Appointed B.C. Committee To Review Mining Rules After Tailings Pond Breach