http://autoinsurancereview.tk/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/car_rain_wet_road-238x143.jpg
Damage assessment begins in Atlantic Canada after heavy rains
Flooding caused widespread damage to Nova Scotia and Newfoundland.
Michael Tutton, The Canadian Press on October 12, 2016
Communities in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland are facing a costly and lengthy cleanup from widespread flooding damage after a storm brought torrential rain to the region over the long weekend.
Premiers in both provinces were scheduled to tour areas damaged in the storm, as power crews worked to restore electricity and schools remained closed in some areas.
The Cape Breton-Victoria School Board announced that students from Brookland Elementary school in Sydney are being temporarily relocated to another school due to water damage to the building.
Parts of the Sydney area received more than 200 millimetres of rain.
In Newfoundland and Labrador, work was continuing to reopen the Trans-Canada Highway in Terra Nova National Park, where a section of the highway had washed away, cutting off southeastern Newfoundland from the rest of the Island.
Cecil Clarke, mayor of the Cape Breton Regional Municipality, said in an interview that it is the worst rain-related disaster to hit his community in his lifetime.
He said it has severely damaged dozens of roads, taken out municipal bridges, destroyed parks and caused extensive damage to flooded homes in several communities in the regional municipality.
The water supply has remained intact, but there has been damage to waste water and a major water main break, the mayor said.
Clarke said the municipality will be applying for disaster relief assistance and he is confident the city has easily reached the minimum $3 million threshold in damage that would qualify it for the relief.
He said many homeowners don’t have insurance and will be waiting to hear what kind of disaster relief they can receive from the province.
“We do not want to have mildew and mould issues going forward. We’re going to undertake a major cleanup to get things out of peoples’ homes as quickly as possible,” he said.
Al Hawkins, Newfoundland and Labrador’s Transport Minister, visited communities on Tuesday and after assessing damage said he is opening talks with Ottawa to seek damage assistance.
He says roads have been destroyed, bridges wiped out and a number of homes have suffered extensive flooding.
Clarke said the weather, which was associated with the remnants of Hurricane Matthew, is a reminder that climate change is contributing to more intense storms on the East Coast.
“The intensity of weather … is definitely changing. We’re feeling that as an island in the North Atlantic. The intensity of weather, whether it’s winter or rain events, it impacts our public works infrastructure heavily,” he said.
Damage assessment begins in Atlantic Canada after heavy rains
No comments:
Post a Comment