Federal government to invest more than $500M in B.C. flood recovery - Action News
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British Columbia

Federal government to invest more than $500M in B.C. flood recovery

Federal minister for emergency preparedness Bill Blair was in Abbotsford on Thursday to announce a $556,955,880 payment to the province through the Disaster Financial Assistance Arrangements program.

2021 flooding most expensive disaster in B.C. history, insurance bureau says

The Sumas Flats in Abbotsford, B.C., pictured following large-scale flooding. Taken Nov. 26, 2021. (Gian Paolo Mendoza/CBC)

The federal government says it is giving more than half-a-billion dollars to B.C. to help deal with ongoing recovery costs after 2021's devastating floods.

Federal minister for emergency preparedness Bill Blair was in Abbotsford one of the many communities hit hard by flooding in November 2021 on Thursday to announce a $556,955,880 payment to the province through the Disaster Financial Assistance Arrangements (DFAA) program.

According to the Government of Canada, this brings the total amount of money given to B.C. through that program to more than $1 billion.

On Nov. 13, 2021, heavy rain began to fall across much of the province. Within days, communities were virtually underwater as thousands of people were displaced and farmlands were destroyed. Thousands of livestock perished and five people died in a mudslide as a result of the downpour.

The rains swelled numerous rivers, which washed away bridges and stretches of highway, cutting off the Lower Mainland from the rest of the country.

"The area was unrecognizable," AbbotsfordMission MLA and Minister of Agriculture Pam Alexis said on Thursday.

"It was just unimaginable the kind of damage we saw."

British Columbians still rebuilding after floods

More than a year later, British Columbians are still rebuilding, and some say they've only received disaster relief funding in the last few months.

John Jongema, a farmer on the Sumas Prairie, told CBC he's still working to fix the damage to his shed after it was damaged byfloodwaters.

"I walk around the neighbourhood and there's still threeor fourhomes just on my street that haven't been rebuilt," he said, noting that he's worried the region isn't ready to withstand another major atmospheric river event.

In the B.C. Interior, Merritt cattle rancher Rhonda MacDonald saidthe river is running where her land used to be.

"We have huge hayfields that the river ran over," she explained, adding that she lost nearly three hectares of land and nearly $1 millionworth of fencing and other farm implements.

The Insurance Bureau of Canada has estimated the cost of insured flood damage was at least $450 million, making it the most expensive disaster in B.C. history.

Provinces and territories can apply for DFAA assistance in the event of a large-scale disaster within six months of it happening.

Once the event has been designated under the DFAA, provinces and territories have up to five years to submit their final claim, to cover the cost of things like evacuation operations, restoring public works and infrastructure and replacing or repairing basic, essential personal property of individuals, small businesses or farms.

Blair said the province will work with First Nations, regional and municipal governments and businesses to determine how the money will be allocated.

With files from The Canadian Press