Officials advocate for federal funding to upgrade dikes after floods

Motorist driving on closes Trans-Canada highway in Abbotsford, BC

OTTAWA – The mayor of Abbotsford, B.C., says expecting local governments to shoulder the cost of infrastructure upgrades to protect their communities from flooding has been a “monumental mistake.”

Henry Braun made the comment to a Senate standing committee on agriculture and forestry as he argued for upward of $2.5-billion from senior levels of government to bring dikes built in the 1940s up to current safety standards.

Heavy rains in November breached nine dikes in Abbotsford, flooding an area the size of Guelph, Ont., and affecting more than 1,100 farms and 2.5 million livestock across southern B.C.

Braun was joined by Jason Lum, chairman of the Fraser Valley Regional District, who says the spring thaw keeps him up at night because he worries a separate aging dike system along the Fraser River can’t handle it.

The B.C. government has made a preliminary submission to federal officials seeking about $4 billion and also earmarked $2.1 billion in its latest budget for disaster recovery across the province.

The federal government has committed $5 billion and Emergency Preparedness Minister Bill Blair has said he sees the urgency supporting those affected by floods and wildfires, however he has not provided a timeline for when the money will be disbursed.

“While meetings with federal and provincial government leaders have been positive, we continue to request funding and support for our long-term solutions and infrastructure needs as we expect these costs will be in the billions,” Braun told the Senate committee.

“Downloading the costs of this type of infrastructure and required maintenance to local governments was, in my opinion, a monumental mistake and is something that needs to be addressed.”

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Feature image: A motorist drives on a service road along the closed Trans-Canada Highway as floodwaters fill the ditches beside the highway and farmland in Abbotsford, B.C., on Wednesday, December 1, 2021. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck