Living in Merritt is like living on an active volcano, says city manager, as concerns loom over flood risk - Action News
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British Columbia

Living in Merritt is like living on an active volcano, says city manager, as concerns loom over flood risk

Residents and municipal officials in Merritt say they are concerned about the possibility of a future disaster damaging homes and infrastructure again, as funding sources for flood prevention efforts remain unclear.

Residents, municipal officials worry not enough is being done to prevent future flooding

Two people are pictured from the back, standing and watching as a flooded city street. Across from them is a playground treehouse; in its background, a house.
Residents of Merritt, B.C., watch a flooded street on Nov. 15, 2021. Municipal leaders in the city say they are concerned about the possibility of a future flood, as funding sources for flood prevention efforts remain unclear. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

Cherylle Douglas says she wakes up three or four times a night to check on the Coldwater River that flows by what used to be her home in Merritt, B.C.

Now she lives in an RV on the muddy pad that used to host the family's trailer.

Her daughter's trailer remains beside the RV, but no one is allowed to live in it because of safety concerns. Many of the other trailers, like Douglas's, were removed earlier this year as part of cleanup of the site.

In November 2021, an atmospheric river flooded large sections of the province and washed out major roadways linking the Interior and Lower Mainland.

All 7,000 residents of Merritt, around 190 kilometres northeast of Vancouver, were forced to evacuate, and more than 600 houses were damaged, 300 of which required extensive repairs or demolition.

A street in Merritt submerged by flowing water. A yellow and blue fire hydrant is also half submerged.
The City of Merritt, B.C., flooded on Nov. 14, 2021, after more than a day of extreme rain across southern B.C. (Submitted by Bailee Allen)

Now, more than two years after the flooding, Douglas worries not enough has been done to prevent it from happening again.

"People have no idea what those of us that live through this flood went through and what we go through everyday. It's really scary," she said.

A woman outside a trailer looks at the camera.
Cherylle Douglas was one of more than 7,000 residents of Merritt forced from their homes during catastrophic flooding in 2021. Two years later, she still hasn't been able to return to a permanent home, and is not sure her property will ever be safe to live in again. (Jenifer Norwell/CBC)

Douglas is not alone in her fears.

Municipal officials say they are concerned about the possibility of a future disaster once again damaging homes and infrastructure, as funding sources for flood prevention efforts remain unclear.

"If we had a clear picture of [whether] the province will pay for this and they won't pay for this then we could get a path forward," saidSean Strang,director of recovery and mitigation with the city.

Like sitting on a volcano

Strang says the current risk of flooding in the community is similar to that of an active volcano.

"You wouldn't be able to rebuild under a volcano and it's a very similar thing, except it's not as visual. It's not obvious,there isn't a big pile of magma."

A bridge out sign and gate on a cracked road.
Progress around rebuilding Merritt has been slow, frustrating residents and city leaders. (Jenifer Norwell/CBC)

He says before the flood, engineers estimated that 130 homes would be affected by a one-in-200-year flooding event not the 640 or so that were affected in 2021.

Now, new estimates from engineers commissioned by the city show that nearly 1,270 homes many of which have since undergone repairs or been rebuilt after the 2021 flood are at risk of flooding again.

The city of Merritt has two rivers within its boundaries: the Coldwater and the Nicola.

Strang says the Nicola River floods more regularly than the Coldwater.

When it does, it's likerising water in a bathtub, whichgoes up slowly and then recedes, whereas the Coldwater tends to move more rapidly and aggressively across the landscape, creating more substantial destruction.

Part of what made the flooding in 2021 so bad, Strang says, was damage from the summer's fires, which made the ground less able to absorb water.

Mitigation work need

The city has struggled to get the fundingit says it needs to properly address future flooding risks.

The province has also previouslyfailed to address those risks despite acknowledging them. CBC News reached out to the provincial government for comment on this storyearly this week, but did not hear backby deadline.

While the provincialand federal governmentscommitted money towardrecovery and mitigation, Strang says there are limitations around how the funding can be spent, because they can only build dykes on municipal land that the City of Merritt owns.

Coldwater River in Merritt, B.C. on Monday, November 14, 2022.
The Coldwater River in Merritt, B.C., pictured on Nov. 14, 2022, one year after the river overflowed, ultimately forcing the city to evacuate. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

In March 2022, the province provided funding for the city to come up with a flood mitigation plan, which included plans to buy back land from residents. However, Strang said in January 2023 that the city was told the province had no money to purchase those properties.

"It's a frustrating place to live," he said.

More recently, in November, the province announced $2 million in funding for 200 metres of dyking along the Coldwater River from Voght Street to Garcia Street.

However, that's not enough to build dykes in all the areas the city has identified, Strang says.

He says at this point, the dykes that are getting built aren't necessarily the ones that could prevent much of future flooding.

"Even more frustrating, [the province] has actually come to us and said, 'Hey, we have some money for you to actually rebuild some of these dikes in the millions of dollars' but we can't buy the land that we need in order to actually build those dikes," Strang said.

"We can't implement it until [the province] comes up with a policy and a plan for us to do."