resident

1 year later, British Columbians who lost everything reflect on devastating floods

1 year later, British Columbians who lost everything reflect on devastating floods

John Jongema's house is habitable again, but he is not getting rid of the fifth-wheel trailer he moved onto his farmland to ride out the rebuild anytime soon. "I'm keeping that trailer as a getaway," he said with a nervous chuckle. Jongema, who lives on a hobby farm on the Sumas Prairie about 90 kilometres east of Vancouver, is one of nearly 20,000 people in the southern part of British Columbia forced from their homes a year ago after record-breaking rains caused catastrophic flooding. The relentless rain came via an atmospheric river — an airborne stream of water vapour across the Pacific that originated in the subtropics. It triggered fatal mudslides, damaged critical highway infrastructure and called into question responsibility for flood mitigation in a province repeatedly pummeled by the impacts of climate change.

Council denies activist’s request for moratorium at Teedon Pit

Council denies activist’s request for moratorium at Teedon Pit

A resident’s plea to stop an aggregate pit just didn’t float with all of Tiny council. Three requests by an ecological defender, in regards to the contentious Teedon Pit extraction in Tiny, were defeated by council during a recent committee of the whole meeting. Anne Ritchie Nahuis appeared virtually before council last month to give a deputation regarding a letter she had sent to the township, chiding them for dragging their feet in halting the potentially aquifer-damaging issues at 90 Darby Road, known as the Teedon Pit.