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hatrack

(59,584 posts)
Fri Feb 25, 2022, 09:05 AM Feb 2022

Slowly And Haltingly, Local Canadian Governments Begin To Buy Out Perennially Flooded Neighborhoods

Grand Forks, B.C., resident Les Johnson is compiling photos to preserve the memory of a flood-damaged neighbourhood before it's fully gone. In May 2018, heavy snowpack and several days of torrential downpour caused local rivers in the southern Interior B.C. city to overflow. This led to severe property damage in the neighbourhood of North Ruckle, which sits on the bank of the Kettle River in the province's Kootenay-Boundary region.

Instead of repairing the neighbourhood, which is at risk of recurrent flooding, the City of Grand Forks has spent $16.5 million in a flood mitigation program, buying approximately 90 properties most at risk of damage as extreme weather events become more common. The program is an example of managed retreat, which refers to the co-ordinated movement of people, and sometimes infrastructure, away from natural hazards often brought about by extreme weather events.

EDIT

In Canada, different levels of government have spent hundreds of millions of dollars on managed retreat buyout programs — including Calgary and High River, Alta., where residents were devastated by flooding in 2013. But the decision to abandon, rather than protect, homes can be controversial, as the City of Surrey learned when it proposed looking into moving or abandoning 400 homes in the Crescent Beach community in order to avoid the effects of sea level rise over the next century. Crescent Beach, along with 20 per cent of Surrey's land area, lies on a coastal floodplain, and is just a few metres above sea level, which is expected to rise one metre by 2100 and two metres by 2200.

Public backlash and vocal opposition soon had the city back away from managed retreat. Jason Thistlethwaite, a professor at the University of Waterloo's school of environment, enterprise and development, said this sort of public outcry makes it difficult for policymakers to implement managed retreat programs. "You may be asking people who've lived in the community for generations if they want to leave," he said. "You may be asking people who can't afford to take the buyout and then move somewhere where the housing is more expensive."

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https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/grand-forks-demolishing-homes-1.6362428

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