basements

Basements, backyards flooded after thunderstorms soak southern Manitoba

Basements, backyards flooded after thunderstorms soak southern Manitoba

The rain kept coming down as Mike Ledarney was already pumping water out of his basement in Teulon on Tuesday. The resident of the Manitoba town, about 60 kilometres north of Winnipeg, said he came home early from work after his sister called to break the news that his basement was flooding. By the time he got back, his dad had a sump pump running, but there was already about 30 centimetres of water in the basement. "It's obviously a lot of stress … having to deal with that, and not knowing always in certainty … what's going to happen next," Ledarney said outside his house later in the day.

Residents of Sunnyside seek solution for water mysteriously pooling on street

Residents of Sunnyside seek solution for water mysteriously pooling on street

Some residents of the inner-city Calgary community of Sunnyside are hoping the city can find a way to turn off the tap on an underground spring that leaves water pooling on their street year-round. The water has been causing trouble on Sunnyhill Lane N.W. for the past couple of years. "About two years ago, this puddle showed up, and it doesn't go away," said Christie Page, who has lived in the neighbourhood for 10 years.

'It's a problem for society': Climate change is making some homes uninsurable

'It's a problem for society': Climate change is making some homes uninsurable

As an insurer, Intact obviously has its own data and maps. Based on that, the company assumes as many as five per cent of those newly at-risk properties will be simply uninsurable. Brindamour warns that "if you're in a zone that gets flooded repeatedly, or where the odds of being flooded has increased meaningfully, it'll be hard to find insurance from private capital."