In the face of flooding disaster, Yarrow residents mobilized to look out for each other - Action News
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British Columbia

In the face of flooding disaster, Yarrow residents mobilized to look out for each other

A new relief community care centre has opened in Yarrow, B.C., to support residents in the aftermath of the floods.

Volunteers sandbagged, created a food bank and have now launched a relief centre offering a range of resources

Volunteers filling sandbags to deliver to farms in Yarrow on Nov. 19. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

When rising waters began gushinginto Fraser Valley properties last week, the community of Yarrow in Chilliwack, B.C., was quick to mobilize.

As the floods deepenedon the neighbouringSumas Prairie in Abbotsford and spilled into Yarrowand in the absence of an official plan from the City of Chilliwack, the provinceor the federal governmentmore than a hundred people showedup to fill and deliver sandbagsthat would help protect their neighbours' livelihoods.

In the immediate aftermath of the floods, withsupply chains choked by damaged infrastructure on major highways,there was a grocery shortage in Yarrow. Within a day, the community established a food bank.

"If anybody needs anything you can walk in there and come out with eggs and milk and produce," saidShawn Vickar, apastor at Yarrow Alliance Church.

Now, recognizing the ongoing needs of those affected by the floods and the ongoing willingness of the community to volunteer their time and skills, four local churches have launched the Flood Relief Community Care Centre in Yarrow to create a local database of volunteers and resources.

"This is not our area of expertise on any level, but we are doing what we can and we're excited to see how the community has been so participatory," said Vickar, one of the relief centre organizers.

"What we really needed to do was begin to streamline and collectively work together to help get resources focused because things were quite scattered, as Week 1of a natural disaster would be."

In its first two days, the relief centre has already had hundreds of people come forward as volunteers. The centre offers access to resources such as lodging, help with physical labour, childcare, counsellingand the food bank, among other services.

A road is pictured underwater in Yarrow on Nov. 19. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

For the people of Yarrow, the notion of neighbours helping neighbours is par for the course.

"This is very much the fruit of the last 50 years of our elders trying to maintain this culture in Yarrow of people caring for each other," said Darnell Barkman, a pastor at Yarrow United Mennonite Church anda relief centre organizer.

He remembers how one family whose own farm had been completely flooded bought platters of sandwiches for volunteers who were busy trying to save another farm, despite the devastation they had personally experienced.

"You walk down the street and thank people for volunteering and they will say 'well,this is what we do in Yarrow.'"

Two men load sandbags off a boat while standing in knee deep water
Volunteers fill boats with sandbags that would be taken to farms in flooded areas of Yarrow on Nov. 19. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

As the waters beginto recedeand the imminent danger subsides, both Vickar and Barkman agree that some of the hardest work the recovery still lies ahead.

But with hundreds of volunteers in the system, they are confident the community of Yarrow will persevere.