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British Columbia

For the second year in a row, a beaver is to blame for phone and internet outages in northern B.C.

B.C. Hydro says abeaver was responsible for adowned tree thatdamaged several telephone poles and fibre cables, causing intermittent internet, TV, home phone and wireless service outagesin parts of northern B.C. on Tuesday.

There were no indications that the beaver had been harmed, B.C. Hydro said

A beaver eating from a branch in the water.
A beaver was responsible for a felled tree that damaged several telephone poles and fibre cables, leading to service outages between Burns Lake and Terrace on June 7, 2022. (Diane Stinson)

For the second time in just over a year, a beaver has been blamed for causing service outages in northern B.C.

B.C. Hydro says one of the large rodents chewed through a tree that fell and damaged several telephone polesand fibre cables near Houston, B.C.,on Tuesday, causing intermittent internet, TV, home phone and wireless service outages in several communities across the province's northwest.

Telusreportedthat serviceswereaffected in Burns Lake, Topley, Terrace, Prince George, Kitimat, Smithers, Granisle and Hazelton. Outages were also reported in PrinceRupert.

The company said it worked with B.C. Hydro to repair the damage and restore service as soon as possible.

Hydro spokesperson Simi Heer said Thursdaythat after repairs were made, workershad a gnawing suspicion that a beaver had something to do with the felledtree, whichwent down close to Highway 16 between Houston and Topley, 14 kilometres east of Houston.

"They discovered the markings on the bottom of the tree, which indicated that it had been chewed through by a beaver," Heer said, adding there were no indications that the rodent had been harmed in any way.

Heer said systemsare in place to try to prevent such brushes with nature, but they do happen from time to time.

"We do have a very vast system and we serve most of the provinceand that means we have lines and infrastructure that run through very remote areas, and at times wildlife can come into contact with our system," she said.

Heer said around 21 B.C. Hydro customers lost power, which was restored the same day.

Last April, around 900 customers in Tumbler Ridge, B.C., lostinternetservice after a beaver chewed through a fibre cable.

ATelus spokesperson at the time called theincident a"bizarre and uniquely Canadian turn of events."

LISTEN |University of Alberta professorGlynnis Hood on co-existing with beavers: