Tornado last year, flood this year for Manitoba First Nation
A First Nations community in western Manitobais facing flooding, just a year after cleaning up from a tornado.
About 145 people are out of their homes on theSioux Valley Dakota Nation, located between Brandon andVirdennorth of the Trans-Canada Highway.
Of the 330 homes on the reserve,45 are flooded, according to Chief Vincent Tacan.
The water is more than a half-metre above the deck ofa bridge that crosses the river.
Several people with medical issues were sent out of the community to Brandon as a precaution, Tacan said.
The river, like many bodies of water in southern Manitoba and Saskatchewan, is swollen from heavy rain through the weekend.
As of Wednesday, about 500 people in Manitoba have lefttheir homes because of the flooding, and 41 municipalities have declared a stateof local emergency. Sioux Valley is among those.
- Manitoba flood evacuees total 500 as more water expected
- Red Cross accepting donations for Manitoba flood relief
In Saskatchewan, 54 communities have states of local emergency.
Much of that water in Saskatchewan is now flowing towards the already-flooded southwest corner of Manitoba.
"I think they're having a little bit of trouble with their, whatever system they have in place to read the water levels and the volumes that are coming through," he said.
"I think they're still working some of the problems they have with that. It's not really an accurate system."
He said there was similar confusion during the flood of 2011, when the province came under criticism for its poor planning and floodforecasting.
A report from an independent task force put together in the wake of the 2011 flood, stated theManitoba government should urge the federal government, which has primary responsibility for First Nations, to develop an emergency management plan for flooding on reserves.
Tornado injures 2
In July 2013, a tornado struck theSioux Valley Dakota Nation, lifting one home off its foundation.
It damaged five other homes and sentone couple to hospital.
Environment Canadas storm survey team said it was likely an EFO OR EF1 tornadomeaning the winds hit about 130 km/h.
Hundreds of trees were uprooted and the community was littered with debris.