More Gatineau residents leaving homes as military arrives to provide flood relief
400 soldiers to be deployed across Quebec flood zones, including Gatineau
As rain continued to fall across the national capital regionSaturday, some of the more than 400 Canadian soldiers whoare beingdeployed to help with the floodingrelief efforts inQuebec arrived inGatineau.
Between 80 and 100 military personnel will bedispatched to the hardest hit areas in the Outoauais, including Gatineau, which has already seen 399 people forced out oftheir homes.
The soldiers will also be sent to Pontiac, Que., which is in the process of evacuating residents from their homes, and Gracefield, Que., which declared a state of emergency on Saturday, saidGaetan Lessard, director of civil security for the Outaouais.
They arrived in Gatineau around 8 p.m.
Les militaires vont se mettre au travail #iciottgat pic.twitter.com/5zIULmKUNs
—@fngueno
Earlier Saturday afternoon, Quebec Public Safety Minister Martin Coiteux and Justice Minister Stphanie Valle held a joint press conference in Gatineauwith the city's mayorMaxime Pedneaud-Jobin to confirm military aid would be on the way.
At the time, one unit of troops had been deployed from CFB Valcartier to support local Quebec authorities as they try to prevent damage from the flooding.
Coiteaux said army personnel are assisting with flood co-ordination, but are not yet on the ground in Gatineau.
He urged residents affected by the flood to heed advice from firefighters who are knocking on doors this weekend.
"If we ask you to leave, it's because of your safety," Coiteauxsaid.
So far,219 homes in Gatineauhave been evacuated.
Another resident told CBC by phone Saturday that he and his wife surveyed the flooding in and around their neighbourhood from their canoe. Alan, who asked that his last name not be used, said a delivery man tried to deliver some coffee to a man who was pumping water out of his basement.
When the delivery man couldn't reach the home, Alan's wife offered to hand over the coffee using their canoe.
Residents fleeing as water level rises
Another deluge of rain Saturday is swelling the Ottawa River and forcing more Gatineau residents from their homes, adding to the 850 peopleacross the province of Quebec who have already left due to flooding.
Another 15 to 25 millimetres of rain is expected to fall Saturday in Ottawa-Gatineau, bringing the total rainfall amount to as high as 70 millimetres, according to Environment Canada. A risk of a thunderstorm could bring that amount even higher.
- Federal government deploys troops to flooded regions amid warning worst is yet to come
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Jonathan Brennan in Gatineau was overwhelmed Saturday morning trying to save his home from the flood.
"I've been working hard since Monday and it's now Saturday morning," he told CBC News, with this voice breaking.
"It's not that I've failed, I tried so hard. I don't know what to do anymore."
Where next? Families exhausted from days of sandbagging leave their homes on advice of #Gatineau fire dept, others battle on #flood #ottnews pic.twitter.com/qw9f8pVsTH
—@onthebeat1
Since May 1, firefighters responding to the flood crisishave knocked on 931 doors towarn people about the flooding risks.
The water level rose19 centimetres atGatineau'sKitchissippiMarina since 4 p.m. Friday, according to a post on the city'sFacebookpage Saturday morning.
With the water level expected to rise another 35 centimetres by Sunday, Mayor Pedneaud-Jobin said on his Facebook page he had made a list of requests for military assistance.
Mandatory evacuations in Pontiac
In the nearby municipality of Pontiac, Que., authorities began carrying out a mandatory evacuation order Saturday followingnearly three weeks' worth of flooding.
Firefighters were called in to help the most vulnerable people leave their homes safely, and police wereready to intervene if residents refused to leave voluntarily.
The municipality declared a state of emergency on Friday, and by Saturday morningabout 60 people had been evacuated, officials said.
vacuation obligatoire @MuniPontiac touche 140 rsidences principales, 95 chalets, 28 routes #iciottgat #inondations pic.twitter.com/Jr8OQgsfTd
—@Estelle_RC
The town of Gracefield, Que., also announced a state of emergency Saturday, and Mayor Joanne Poulin told Radio-Canada that there was a possibility the entire town could end up having to leave.
"We are at a point where the streets are not accessible. We know that the situation is getting worse," Poulin said in French.
A major with the Canadian Armed Forces visited the community to assess the situation, Poulin said, and the Canadian Red Cross is expected to arrive on Monday.
Rainfall warning in effect
With the ground already saturated with water, the city of Ottawa is on track to break rainfall records for two days in a row.
On Friday, Ottawa recorded 40.4 millimetres of rainfall, breaking the record for May 5 that was set in 1985. That last record was for only24.6 millimetres of rain. If Ottawa gets more than 19.6 millimetres of rain Saturday, the city will also break a 65-year-old daily record set on May 6,1952.
Environment Canada is advising motorists to avoid driving on washed-out roads and for people to move valuable items to higher levels because of the flooding.
The weather agency is forecasting a high of 16C for Ottawa, with more rain tonight and a low of 6 C.
In the Ottawa region, a special meeting will be held Saturdaybetween 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. at the Clarence Creek Arena in Clarence-Rockland. The city declared a state of emergency on Thursdayas the Ottawa River is lapping right up to waterfront homes.
Please be cautious on the Capital Pathway network as rising water levels closes many sections of pathways. https://t.co/GYUxIZy9rM #ottgat pic.twitter.com/Uvu7xVwS1D
—@NCC_CCN
With files from Radio-Canada