B.C. floods caused at least $450M in damage, insurance bureau says

The Insurance Bureau of Canada estimates the insured damage caused by flooding in British Columbia last month at $450 million, calling it the “most costly severe weather event in the province’s history.”

Flooded area of Sumas Prairie in Abbotsford, B.C. pictured on Dec. 3. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

 

The Insurance Bureau of Canada estimates the insured damage caused by flooding in British Columbia last month at $450 million, calling it the “most costly severe weather event in the province’s history.”

However, the overall costs are expected to be much higher since many people affected by the flooding in southwestern B.C. were located in high-risk areas where flood insurance was not available, the bureau said in a news release.

“These disasters are also having an outsized impact on those most vulnerable and, as a result, we must greatly enhance our efforts to mitigate future climate change and to adapt to the new weather reality we face,” said Aaron Sutherland, vice-president of the Pacific bureau.

At the peak of the emergency, almost 15,000 people were forced from their homes.

The series of atmospheric rivers smashed rainfall records, causing rivers and streams to overflow, washing away roads, bridges and railways and flooding farms in up to two metres of water.

Dikes couldn’t hold the waters back from swamping Abbotsford’s Sumas Valley, a former lake bed and prime farming area in the province. The death toll included more than 600,000 poultry, 12,000 hogs, 420 dairy cattle and 120 beehives.

The bureau said its latest dollar figure is in addition to about $155 million in insured damage caused by the wildfires in B.C. over the summer.

 

Flooding in Sumas Prairie, Abbotsford. The Insurance Bureau of Canada says the flooding was the most costly severe weather event in B.C.’s history. (Oliver Walters/CBC)

 

Also Thursday, the executive director of the First Nations Emergency Management Society called for a more integrated alert system and consistent funding after it took days to co-ordinate and reach remote Indigenous communities cut off by the flooding.

Wayne Schnitzler said the implementation would streamline communication and emergency response between the agency and its provincial and federal partners, and better prepare remote communities for disaster.

The Assembly of First Nations said as many as 42 First Nation communities were damaged by the last month’s floods, but the Emergency Services Society said they were notified more than 60 communities were impacted in various ways.

“There are First Nations that are still cut off and struggling, including communities along the Highway 8 corridor and Fraser Canyon (Highway 1),” it said in an email.

Schnitzler said the society is not heavily funded by Indigenous Services Canada until a disaster occurs, which leaves them scrambling to organize and respond. He said it was several days before they could begin to help isolated communities with resources and supplies after the recent floods.

“We’re working on getting more funding so we can have better capacity to deal with these issues ourselves,” Schnitzler said. “It’s difficult to put together a team in the middle of an emergency.”

More storms on the way

This comes as Emergency Management B.C. warns of another strong storm coming for several parts of B.C. starting Friday. It predicts snow in parts of the Interior and mountain passes, up to 60 millimetres of rain for the Lower Mainland with high winds across much of the province.

The government said in the statement the weather “may pose further challenges in areas recovering from November’s storms.”

Transportation Minister Rob Fleming said in a news conference Thursday that B.C.’s Coquihalla Highway could reopen sooner than expected if the weather co-operates.

“We are confident it could instead reopen in early January. This is remarkable given the scale of damage on the Coquihalla,” Fleming said.

The highway, which connects the Lower Mainland to the Interior and is a major trucking route, had more than 130 kilometres of roadway damage and five bridges washed away.

Assembly of First Nations National Chief RoseAnne Archibald was scheduled to tour some of the flooded areas on Thursday. After the floods, Archibald called for the federal government to immediately fund the First Nations Emergency Management Society, allowing it to deal with the specific needs of Indigenous communities during the crisis.

About a week later, Indigenous Services Canada announced $4.4 million in funding.

The assembly said the province signed a $29 million Emergency Services Agreement with Indigenous Services Canada in 2018 to provide emergency help to First Nations in B.C. through Emergency Management B.C. They said this included 28 emergency management coordinator positions for First Nations, which have not yet been filled.

Indigenous Services Canada did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

 

Total costs are expected to be much higher because some damaged homes and farms are in areas where flood insurance isn’t available. (Jonathan Hayward/The Canadian Press)

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