Flood map revision removes hundreds of West Island properties from high-risk zone - Action News
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Montreal

Flood map revision removes hundreds of West Island properties from high-risk zone

In total, 17 cities and municipalities primarily in the greater Montreal area and further west of the island are now no longer considered in a flood zone, according to a new draft of the governmentmap that indicatesflood plainsin the province.

Mayors and experts say Quebec government rushed out early versions of the map, which included errors

Beaconsfield Mayor George Bourelle said Tuesday that the city is examining the revised draft. (Simon Nakonechny/CBC)

The Quebec government has revised a flood map that was going to ban construction work on hundreds of properties in the West Island.

In total, 17 cities and municipalities primarily in the greater Montreal area and further west of the island are now no longer considered in a flood zone, according to a new draft of thegovernmentmap that indicatesflood plainsin the province.

The map was initially released in June, as part of the province'sresponse to wide-scale spring flooding. It was first revised in July. The latest draft was released Monday.

Earlier versions of the map hadlabelled large parts of the West Island as a "special intervention zone," where both reconstruction and new construction were put on hold.

But in its Augustincarnation, swaths of Montreal, Pierrefonds, Roxboro, Beaconsfield, Dorval, L'le-Dorval, Pointe-Claire, Notre-Dame-de-l'le Perrot, Pincourt and Chteauguaywere declared safe to build on.

Smaller portions of Senneville, Beauharnois, Lry, Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, Vaudreuil-Dorion, Saint-tienne-de-Beauharnois and Saint-Louis-de-Gonzague were also taken out of the special intervention zone.

Flood maps 'puzzling,' says river management expert

Municipal Affairs Minister Andre Laforesthas said the province-wide flood mapwas created by including areas flooded in 2017 and 2019 and by using historical data of identify zero-to-20-year flood zones where the chance of flooding each year is greater than five per cent.

Any homeowner whose propertysustained more than 50 per cent flood damage in 2017 or 2019, as well as homes designated as being at high risk of flooding ended up in the"special intervention zone."

But after it was first released, the map attracted criticism from mayors who found large portions of their municipality marked as aspecial intervention zone.

Vaudreuil-Dorion Mayor Guy Pilonaccused the government of rushing to release the map, which he said contained errors caused by clouds obscuring satellite imagery.

An earlier version of the flood map, seen here, placed Pointe-Claire, Baie d'Urf, Dorval and Beaconsfield in a high-risk zone. None of the municipalities flooded in 2017 or 2019. (Quebec Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing)

Moreover, Pointe-Claire, Baie D'Urf, Dorval and Beaconsfield all found themselves labelled as high-risk flood zones, even though they weren't affected by flooding this spring, or in 2017.

"Most people I have to say, myself included are a bit puzzled because it's not a very complicated thing to do, inthe sense that water was either there [or it wasn't]," saidPascale Biron, a geography professor at Concordia Universitywho specializesin river management

She agreed that clouds were to blame for some of the problems, as was the poor image resolution of some of the satellite imagery. But the more fundamental issue, she said, was a flawed process on the part of the government.

"The problem is really that they created thismaprather quickly," she said.

The government, she added, did things "backwards" by only consulting with municipalities after the map was created, and not before.

West Island mayor relieved

Beaconsfield Mayor George Bourelle said he is "very pleased" with the latest revision. "It looks like we've been completely removed from the flood-zone map."

He said that the province's decision to initially include152 of Beaconsfield's waterfront properties in the flood zone wasn't supported by data.

"Initially, they wanted to put a whole blanket on areas they suspected would be flooded," he said.

The municipality of Pierrefonds-Roxboro was one of the harder-hit areas by the spring floods of 2017. Parts of the borough were removed from the flood map. (CBC Archives)

Bourelle said Beaconsfield has always respected the zero-to-20-year flood zone restrictions. He said he wasable to prove thatina meeting with Laforest last Friday.

Municipalities haveuntil August 19 to signal any further adjustments that need to be made on the flood maps.

The revision is a joint effort between Quebec's Ministry of Municipal Affairs andthe Environment Ministry.

With files from Elysha Enos and Verity Stevenson