'I just want to give up': Cleaning flood zones in Montreal will take weeks - Action News
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'I just want to give up': Cleaning flood zones in Montreal will take weeks

After several weeks of spring flooding, water levels are slowly receding in most of southern Quebec, but that doesnt mean affected residents can simply pick up where they left off. There is still plenty of work to do and Montreals is no exception.

Montrealers look to the future after an extremely wet spring

With a broom in hand and a dust mask strapped to his face, Richard Proulxwas out cleaning uphis property on Monday in le Bizard. (CBC)

After several weeks of spring flooding, water levels are slowly receding in most of southern Quebec, but that doesn't mean affected residents can simply pick up where they left off.

There is still plenty of work to do and Montreal'sle Bizard is no exception.

With a push broom in hand and a dust mask strapped to his face, Richard Proulxwas out cleaning his property on Monday.

The water on his street went down over the long May weekend, so he returned home after staying with friends for two weeks.

Richard Proulx says he's ready to accept a provincial buyout so he can move far away from the river. (CBC)

This is the second time Proulx has lived through flooding on his street in three years and the situation is taking its toll.

"I just want to give up," he told CBC Montreal. "I don't want to live that anymore."

Proulx said he is not thinking about the future and he may accept the provincial government's offer to buyout homes in flood zones.

He's not sure where he'd move, but it would definitely be far from the river,he said with a smile.

While his street is drying up, others on le Bizard are still flooded.

le-Bizard-Sainte-Genevive borough mayor Normand Marinacci says residents like Proulx are not alone it's been a tough spring for many but, with water levels going down,he expects the situation to gradually return to normal in the coming days.

le-Bizard-Sainte-Genevive borough mayor Normand Marinacci says the spring has been hard on many residents and the cleanup will not happen overnight. (CBC)

"Remember, in 2017, it came fast, by surprise, but the water left fast," he recounted. "This year, it's lingering it's long."

Once the water does finally drain, next comes the cleanup, he said, and that's expected to take weeks.

People across the bridge in the borough of Pierrefonds-Roxboro are in the same boat. It has put out a call for volunteers to help with the cleanup next weekend.

With files from Matt D'Amours