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As 'overwhelming' cleanup begins in Peguis First Nation, extent of flood damage emerges

As floodwaters recede in Manitoba's Interlake, some Peguis First Nation evacuees are heading back to clean up the saturated community and in some cases discovering their homesand possessions sustained devastating damage.

Preliminary estimates suggest as many as 700 homes sustained some kind of damage, Peguis officials say

Cheryl Thomson returned to Peguis First Nation this week to find her home and the possessions inside now strewn about her yard to dry badly damaged. The community began cleanup efforts this week, which includes inviting residents back to help officials get a handle of the extent of the damage to their homes. (Travis Golby/CBC)

As floodwaters recede in Manitoba'sInterlake, some Peguis First Nation evacuees are heading back to clean up the saturated community and in some cases discoveringdevastating damage.

Cheryl Thomson was among the first wave to return in recent days to find her propertyinvarying states of disrepair.

"Very stressful but trying to stay positive," Thomson said Tuesday, surveying the damage to her waterlogged home and possessions four days into the cleanup.

Peguis, about160 kilometres north of Winnipeg,declared a state of emergencyandissued an evacuation order at the beginning of May,as the flooding Fisher River washed out roads and breached dikes.

On Tuesday, the concerted effort to repatriate the remaining 1,500 evacuees, assess damage and start cleaning up hundreds of flood-affected homes began.

Thomson remains hopeful everything will turn out OK, but on this latest trip back, with floodwaters now gone from her property, the mark they leftis clear.

Thomson gestures to a water line at about chest height left on a basement cupboard in her home during the flood. (Travis Golby/CBC)

Her basement and its bedrooms sustained significant damage, as did the furnace, hot water tank and appliances.

Hauling her soaked items into her yard to dry, Thomson estimates she lost about $10,000 in supplies and personal items, including a buffalo robe, sewing machines and ceremonial clothes she made.

"All my ribbon skirts that I had for ceremony are all destroyed," said Thomson. "It's very overwhelming. Many times I had to tell my sisters that I had to walk away, go and catch my breath."

Up to 700 homes damaged

Peguis officials' preliminary estimate is between 600 and 700 homes sustained some kind of damage during the flood, including 200 that may be completely destroyed,said William Sutherland, the First Nation's director ofemergency management and housing.

A large red sign is seen that says
The Peguis First Nation sign on Tuesday. Just weeks ago flood waters rose to the bottom of the letters. (Travis Golby/CBC)

He said there's a need for over 860new homes based on damage from the flood this year and those from past years.

Sutherland has been director of emergency management and housing for Peguis First Nation since 2009, though he has memories of evacuations in the flood-prone communitygoing back as far as 1974.

Thatyear, the military was called in andhis family was helicoptered out, said Sutherland.

A partial evacuation was ordered during the 2017 flood,but Sutherland says he's never seen anything close to the damage left in the wake of this spring's flood.

"It affected the entire reserve," he said from Peguis on Tuesday.

William Sutherland says the true extent of damage to homes will continue to be revealed in the coming days and weeks as more evacuees return and allow officials inside their houses to assess the impact. (Travis Golby/CBC)

Sutherland said thenorth end of the community bore the brunt of the damage. Residents from that part of the community feel they were left out of flood preparation considerations, said Sutherland.

"You may not have the opportunity to explain that we tried everything," he said.

"But at the time, at the height of the crisis, when the water was at its peak level with the current, it was just too dangerous. We couldn't have our workers possibly drown while taking their staff in a truck and have one of these trailers pulling them off of the highway."

Cleanup efforts Tuesday involved clearing away sandbags and rapid response flood tubes, he said.

Part of the work now is trying to gain access to homes locked up during the mass exodus and assessing which are safe to return to, and then bringing those people back, Sutherland said.

A sandbag row extends through an array of water-damaged items on a Peguis First Nation property on Tuesday, May 25, 2022. (Travis Golby/CBC)

Depending on the extent of the damage,some property owners may be compensated for home repair costs. Other homesmay be deemed a total loss, though how many were ruined is still an emerging picture.

"A lot of houses have lost everything," Sutherland said. "Those with more extreme damages, unfortunately, they'll have to remain as evacuees for a much longer term."

That's a reality Robert Thomas is relieved he won't experience.

Robert Thomas and his father worked for about four days running pumps and building up a sandbag wall around their home in Peguis First Nation. They returned recently to begin cleaning up. (Travis Golby/CBC)

His home in the north of Peguiswas damaged butis salvageable.

It took a lot of work to keep the waterat bay. He and his father worked around the clock in the first three or four days the water rose around their sandbagged home.

"I am hurting for the people who have lost their homes, because our last flood was unfortunate and some people got relocated for quite a while," he said.

"That is one reason why we did not want to leave our home.We didn't want to have to wait a few years to get another house."

Thomas pulls back a tarp to reveal bags and boxes of waterlogged items damaged during flooding on his property. (Travis Golby/CBC)

With the flood behind him, Thomas says he is grateful to everybody that helped the community.

"It was very stressful," he said.

"We're slowly feeling the anxiety and anxiousness going away because [the flood] is gone.Now, it's just the cleanup

'Overwhelming' cleanup begins in Peguis First Nation

2 years ago
Duration 2:45
As floodwaters recede in Manitoba's Interlake, some Peguis First Nation evacuees are heading back to clean up the saturated community and in some cases discovering devastating damage.

With files from Sheila North