Wildfires prompt new B.C. protocols around flooding and mudslides - Action News
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British Columbia

Wildfires prompt new B.C. protocols around flooding and mudslides

The province has placed travel advisories and signs on roads in the Interior telling drivers not to stop when it's raining toprotect themfrom mudslides. Slope stability has changed in some areas due to wildfires, say officials.

Slope stability has changed in some areas due to wildfires, say officials

A mudslide near Highway 97 in the summer of 2018. (Jenifer Norwell/CBC)

The province has placed travel advisories and signs on roads in the Interior telling drivers not to stop when it's raining toprotect themfrom mudslides.

Last summer, major mudslides affected a number of highwaysin the Cache Creek/Clinton/Lillooet, B.C., area. Flows along Highway 99forced 24 people from the Bonaparte Indian Band out of their homes.

In the Cache Creek area,mudslides closed the highway several timesand in one instance swept away a car, killinga passenger.

As a result, signs and warnings have been put in place along a stretch ofHighway 97 from Cache Creek to just south of Clinton, and on Highway 99 near Lillooet, as well as on the back roads in the area.

Tim Giles, research geomorphologist with theMinistry of Forest Lands NaturalResource Operations and Rural Development, said the ministry has been working to get the message out that wildfires have fundamentally changed slope stability.

The signsoutline what people should do if they're in an area prone to mudslides, Giles said.

The Elephant Hill wildfire burns through a hillside near Clinton, B.C., on Aug. 8, 2017. (Master Cpl. Malcolm Byers/Wainwright Garrison Imaging)

Changes in soil

The Ministry of Forests is not the only provincial departmentconcerned withthe increased risk of mudslides. The Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure has also flagged the rising danger, which is connected to climate-related events.

"The last two fire seasons ... fundamentally changed the landscape," said Mike Lorimer, the Transportation Ministry'sexecutive director for the southern Interior.

Wildfires, likethe one atElephant Hill in 2017, burn soil. In some cases this creates a hard crust on the surface that doesn't absorb water when it rains.

This allows water to run off and create floods or mudslides. Flows can start almost instantly when there's a heavy rain, Giles said.

New protocols developed

After the Elephant Hill wildfire, the Transportation Ministry developed new protocols based on what was learned from the mudslides.

Beyond increasingsignage and online communications to the public, the ministry has made changes behind the scenes, including detailed weather forecasting for specific areas and real-time weather reports. Rain gauges have been installed in the backcountry, and contractors in areas affected by fires are now expected to increase monitoring when it's raining.

A mudslide on a property outside of Cache Creek in August 2018. (Jenifer Norwell/CBC)

Despite the changes, some residents in areas affected by mudslides still have concerns.

Sherri Walker lives in Forest Grove in the Cariboo and regularly drives to Ashcroft along Highway 97. She worries about the tankers that drive the highway and what would happen if one was caught in a mudslide.

"It's not just a matter of fixing it. It's [about] preventative measures so these things don't happen again," she said.

However, Lorimer from the Ministry of Transportation believes new protocols will help reduce the risk of people being hurt on area highways.

"I love the highways being open, but if my engineers are telling us that that needs to be closed, it's not safe ... we will back them," said Lorimer.

"We will always err on the side of caution."

According to both the Ministry of Forests and the Ministry of Transportation, mudslides are expected to cause issues for three to five years after a major wildfire. After that time, enough vegetation will haveregrown to help stabilize the slope.

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With files by Daybreak Kamloops and Jenifer Norwell.

With files from Jenifer Norwell and Daybreak Kamloops