Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

British Columbia

After days away, officials to decide if Grand Forks, B.C., homes are livable

Around 3,000 homes and businesses in the Kootenay Boundary region are still a no-go zone, including most of downtown Grand Forks. On Saturday, the focus is getting evacuees back home.

Dozens of crewmembers trained to assess buildings to see how badly they are damaged

Nicole Heppner says she and her neighbours are in 'a difficult and unique situation' now that the Granby River near Grand Forks has marooned their homes on islands. She was smiling after hearing that they could be allowed home as early as Saturday. (Bob Keating/CBC)

Two weeks ago, there was a road connecting Nicole Heppner's property to her neighbour's homestead just outside Grand Forks, B.C.

The Granbyriver was still within its banks then.

Now, Heppner'shome is surrounded by murky water from the overflowingriver. Her neighbours live on a new island with no access.

"The whole road is probably under about 12 to 15 feet [4-5 metres] of water," Heppner said.

The Granby River has cut new channels up the 'north fork,' near Grand Forks. Farms have been marooned on islands. (Bob Keating/CBC)

It's the kindof situation emergency officials in the Kootenay Boundary region and many other areas of the province have been dealing with since historic flooding began earlier this spring.

Around 3,000 homes andbusinesses in the region are still a no-go zone, including most of downtown Grand Forks.

On Saturday, the focus is getting evacuees back home.

Nearly 50 people have been trained to rapidly assess the damage to buildings, coding them either red, yellow or green.

A man carries guitars through a flood,
Lars Androsoff carries his friend's guitars as he walks through the floodwaters in Grand Forks on Thursday. (Jonathan Hayward/The Canadian Press)

Bill White helped get those teams ready. He said they'll spend about half an hour in each structureto decide if they're livable.

"It'sreally a look at buildings from the perspective of a life," he said.

"What has the water done to the house?What are the impacts?What has changed for the family that lives there?" he continued. "And, the issue is, is it safe for them to live there?"

Select residents in Grand Forks'Ruckle neighbourhood were allowed back home briefly Thursday to collect valuables and lay down more sandbags.

The area, just off downtown Grand Forks, isone of the city's hardest-hit. A blend of river water and sewage swamped more than 100 homes.

Many were anxious to get home after daysaway, but the damage was overwhelming.

Checkpoints were set up by the RCMP as volunteers collected names and phone numbers of those entering the neighbourhood. (Tina Lovgreen/CBC)

"It's messy, scary," said resident Anne Byers.

"There are piles of crap all over the place, and it's starting to stink."

Others said their homes were coated with mud from floor to ceiling. Cupboards were so swollen with water, they couldn't be pried open.

About 600 homes will have to be assessed to determine if they are salvageable. (Tina Lovgreen/CBC)

Frances Maika, communications officer with the KootenayBoundary Regional District, said inspectors are starting with the least-damagedareas on Saturday.

In all, they'd have about 600 homes to get through.

She said rivers in the region are expected to crest one more time over the weekend before a long-awaited reprieve.

This week, hundreds of Canadian Armed Forces members were deployed to help B.C. communities overwhelmed by the floodwaters after the province asked for federal help.

A member of the Canadian Armed Forces helps with sandbagging in Grand Forks, B.C., on Friday. (Tina Lovgreen/CBC)

Around4,500 people have been forced out of their homes across the province this flood season. Another7,000 are under evacuation alert, keeping a close eye on the weather.

Several rivers in the Interior areexpected to peak over the weekend, bringing a second round of flooding to many already swamped communities.

OkanaganLake isexpected to rise, once again, to the record levels seen during last year's widespread floods.

With files from Bob Keating and Tina Lovgreen