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After the Floods, British Columbia Picks Up the Pieces

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Washed-out roads and destroyed bridges are just some of the devastation afflicting residents of the western province and could signal what climate change will bring in the future.


PRINCETON, British Columbia тАФ With light drizzle in the air, a young woman wiped away tears as she stood on the veranda of a newly renovated gray and white house. Its toilets and other plumbing fixtures sat beside her. Most of the houseтАЩs other contents were on the street in a muddy pile.

Three doors down, a chain of soldiers in green camouflage fatigues stacked sandbags atop a rock-and-earth dike intended to keep the Tulameen River out of modest homes on Allison Avenue. The engine noise and reverse warning beeps of a small excavator filled the air as it scraped up mud, soggy mattresses, end tables, chairs, tools and VHS cassettes of childrenтАЩs cartoons.

The heavy rains that caused flooding in Princeton and across southern British Columbia were the third large-scale natural disaster this part of Canada has endured in six months тАФ the likely cumulative effects of climate change, according to climate experts.

Record-breaking heat waves, flooding and wildfires have killed hundreds of British Columbians and have highlighted CanadaтАЩs vulnerability to extreme weather. On their own, each event has caused widespread devastation, but they are perhaps even more profound, according to researchers, because they followed one another in this sequence, producing so-called тАЬcompound effects.тАЭ

Western Canada suffered a blistering heat wave for much of the summer as record-high temperatures caused uncontrolled forest fires that burned one community to the ground.

Now, the region is facing washed-out roads and highways, mud-clogged houses and destroyed bridges after nearly a foot of rain poured from a weather event known as an atmospheric river тАФ long bands of water vapor that form over the Pacific Ocean and drift to North America every fall and winter. Forecasts of more heavy rainfall for this week have renewed flooding worries and prompted precautionary closings of highway routes that had just reopened.

тАЬWe have not had this number of atmospheric rivers in such a short time period hitting into the coast,тАЭ said Rachel White, a professor at the University of British Columbia who studies how large-scale atmospheric patterns contribute to extreme weather. тАЬThe scary possibility is that climate change is making those more likely and more frequent.тАЭ

Last week, Bonnie and Bryan Webber finished stuffing the last of their salvageable belongings into a small pickup truck after floodwaters ravaged their 700-square-foot home, which sits directly beside the dike in Princeton, a town of 2,800 residents.

They bought their house 22 years ago and moved from the Vancouver area shortly afterward, when Mr. Webber retired from the cityтАЩs sewer and drainage department.

тАЬI just canтАЩt believe itтАЩs been 12 days already,тАЭ Mrs. Webber said last Thursday, her voice tinged with bewilderment and exhaustion. “EveryoneтАЩs overwhelmed in emotions now and itтАЩs physically trying, too. Everybody needs help.тАЭ

At least 12,000 British Columbians remained displaced by the floods this week, most with no clear return date. Some communities remained evacuated. Schools and one major railway route were closed. And large sections of highways critical to moving goods from Vancouver to the rest of Canada have been closed by landslides, flooding, washouts and collapsed bridges. Partial reopenings are weeks away for some highways and full restoration will take months, perhaps longer.

The cost remains anyoneтАЩs guess.

тАЬThis wonтАЩt be cheap, thatтАЩs for sure,тАЭ said Ian Pilkington, the provinceтАЩs chief engineer of highways. тАЬBut even at this point, weтАЩre still assessing and trying to figure out what we need to do.тАЭ

For many people in the province, looming above it all is a nagging fear that the weather turmoil is a sign of what climate change will bring.

Sam Parara, a transit bus driver in Vancouver, had planned to start a new life in a Princeton house he recently purchased and was renovating. As he carried a pile of objects so mud-covered as to be unidentifiable to the curb, Mr. Parara said heтАЩs concerned about the long-term implications of his provinceтАЩs weather disasters.

тАЬIтАЩve listened to David Suzuki talking about climate change for a long time,тАЭ he said referring to the Canadian broadcaster, geneticist and environmentalist. тАЬAll of a sudden, the climate is very unpredictable,тАЭ he said. тАЬMaybe we need to think about doing things in a different way.тАЭ

Experts are unclear as to whether this yearтАЩs weather is a direct result of climate change. Many, however, say they are certain that climate change worsened the effects.

The drought, for example, dried out vegetation, which in turn fueled and intensified fires. Fire itself can weaken or kill plants and make the soil less permeable, so rain is more likely to run off, not soak in. This can create conditions for the types of dangerous landslides and mudslides seen in recent weeks.

While atmospheric rivers are the primary source of rainfall along the west coast, models show that atmospheric river storms are likely to strengthen and intensify from warmer air, which can hold more moisture.

Two weeks ago in British Columbia, a pair of atmospheric river storms struck in quick succession. тАЬThose back-to-back storms are where we get the biggest impact,тАЭ said Marty Ralph, the director of the Center for Western Weather and Water Extremes at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. Dr. Ralph noted the second storm stalled, which can create longer rainfalls over one location. Those conditions тАЬwere sort of a kicker that pushed things over the edge.тАЭ

As the water raged down the mountainsides in the region and then along the Fraser River into Vancouver, its destruction took many forms.

In the town of Merritt, a river had poured into the sewage treatment plant forcing the evacuation of all 5,300 residents. The torrent carved a new path for the river through town, felling a bridge, sweeping a mobile home downstream and leaving another partly submerged while destroying parts of the drinking water system.

Much of the ranch land of the nearby Shackan First Nation was consumed by a swollen river. Not only is the road into the area gone, Chief Arnold Lampreau said, the spring runoff may reveal new flood dangers.

The Trans Mountain pipeline, which links AlbertaтАЩs oil sands to refineries in Washington state and a port in suburban Vancouver, was left with several sections uncovered or underwater. No leaks were reported, but the pipeline operator shut it down, with hopes to at least partly reopen this week.

Mr. Pilkington, the highway engineer chief, has been using helicopters to airlift equipment and workers into otherwise inaccessible areas that need rebuilding.

The temporary fixes to some main highways may take until the new year to complete, he said. But the long-term repairs will be guided by a new approach: climate forecasts, instead of historical data, to determine the height of bridges, the size of culverts and capacity of drainage systems.

тАЬTo now realize that historical data is not relevant and that if you rely on it, youтАЩll under design every time тАФ thatтАЩs an interesting thing for engineers have to wrap their head around,тАЭ he said.

Despite the devastation, Princeton was alive with cleanup efforts last week. Volunteers, often from nearby communities, roamed in white disposable suits helping residents remove waterlogged appliances, sewage-contaminated mud and sodden drywall.

In the midst of the muck, a group of schoolteachers commuted to the town every day and set up a table with trays of homemade sandwiches and baked goods, as well as large pots of soup for the cleanup volunteers and residents.

тАЬIn the springtime with the runoff, youтАЩre expecting, youтАЩre watching but, come on, this never happens in November,тАЭ said Denise Cook, who grew up in Princeton and came back to volunteer. тАЬI never would have thought that it would be as bad as this is. ItтАЩs bad. People sitting at home watching this, they have no idea.тАЭ

Vjosa Isai and Winston Choi-Schagrin contributed reporting.

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