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FM
Former Member

Police say stay out of downtown Calgary as 100,000 evacuated due to flooding

 

Downtown Calgary could look like a bit of a ghost town today, with entire neighbourhoods shut down and office workers told to stay home due to massive flooding.

 

As rain-swollen rivers burst their banks across southern Alberta on Thursday, more than a dozen towns declared states of emergency, with entire communities including High River and Bragg Creek under mandatory evacuation orders.

 

The impact was felt as far afield as British Columbia, where roads in the mountains were being closed, and Saskatchewan, where outflows were increased at the Gardiner Dam in anticipation of the coming crest.

 

In Calgary, officials started a series of rolling evacuations they estimated would result in 100,000 people being forced from their homes.

 

But as neighbourhood after neighbourhood emptied out, some people were steadfastly determined to stay.

 

Deputy police Chief Trevor Daroux said all officers could do was stress the dangers of staying, but admitted police aren't in a position to remove anyone physically.

 

"These are hazardous areas," he said. "There will not be power once the areas are evacuated and gas as well. So we're asking people to please comply and leave on their own."

 

Police were also concerned about the possibility of looters taking advantage of the thousands of empty homes.

 

"That's why we have a plan in place and as we evacuate the area we will be backfilling with security forces."

 

The RCMP called in the military, which sent two helicopters and a Hercules aircraft to help rescue those stranded on rooftops and in areas where roads had been washed out.

 

The traditional Edmonton-Calgary rivalry went by the wayside, with the capital city promising to send 100 of its police officers today to help out where needed.

 

Bruce Burrell, director of the Calgary Emergency Management Agency, said water levels on the Bow River aren't expected to subside until Saturday afternoon.

 

"Depending on the extent of flooding we experience overnight, there may be areas of the city where people are not going to be able to get into until the weekend," he told a news conference.

 

All schools — both Catholic and public — were to be closed today, while Catholic schools in Chestermere, Airdrie and Cochrane were also to be shuttered.

 

The Calgary Zoo, located on St. George's Island, closed its gates and started taking steps "to secure and move animals to safe locations."

 

It had been a rainy week throughout much of Alberta, but on Thursday the Bow River Basin was battered with up to 100 mm of rain.

 

There were flashpoints of chaos from Banff and Canmore and Crowsnest Pass in the Rockies, to Calgary and beyond in the north and south to Lethbridge.

 

"I woke up at about three o'clock in morning to the sound of this kind of rumbling and it was the creek," said Wade Graham of Canmore.

 

"All you can hear is like boulders and trees. I watched a refrigerator go by, I watched a shed go by, I watched couches go by. It's insane."

 

The flooding was particularly destructive in communities just south of Calgary such as High River, Turner Valley and Black Diamond, where the Highwood River swept away two people.

 

One was found, but the second — a woman — is still missing.

Environment Canada's forecast calls for more rain today in the area, but in much smaller amounts.

 

Premier Alison Redford was returning home to Alberta from a conference in New York and plans to visit the affected areas today.

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Guide to flood information

 

Mandatory evacuation notices were issued to up to 100,000 people in 22 neighbourhoods along low-lying areas of the Elbow and Bow Rivers on Thursday, as city officials cautioned that more communities will probably be told to pack up and leave as flood waters were expected to peak overnight.

 

Information about the flooding and evacuations is located on the City of Calgary’s website. The city is also posting updates on its official Facebook and Twitter feeds, as are Calgary Police.

 

Information on evacuations and area maps: calgary.ca/General/Pages/State-of-Local-Emergency.aspx


Communities on a mandatory evacuation order: Beltline, Bonnybrook, Bowness, Bridgeland Industrial Area, Chinatown/Eau Claire, Cliff Bungalow, Deer Run, Discovery Ridge, Downtown/East Village, Elbow Park, Erlton, Inglewood, Hillhurst, Mission, Montgomery, Quarry Park, Rideau, Riverbend, Riverdale, Roxboro, Stanley Park/Elboya, Sunnyside, Victoria Park, Westmount and Windsor Park.

 

Evacuation instructions from the City of Calgary:

* Notify your neighbours before evacuating homes

* Mark an ‘X’ on your front door so police and fire officials can see that you’ve left your home

* Pack enough clothes and supplies to last you at least one week


Evacuation centres:

* Southland Leisure Centre (2000 Southland Drive S.W.)

* Acadia Recreation Complex (240 90th Ave. S.E.)

* Centre Street Church (3900 2nd Street N.E.)

* Village Square Leisure Centre (2623 56th Street N.E.)

* South Fish Creek Recreation Centre (333 Shawville Blvd. S.E.)

 

Residents can take their pets to the Animal Service Centre (2201 Portland Street S.E.) or the Calgary Humane Society (4455 110th Ave S.E.) if they need accommodation for them.


Calgary Transit detours: calgarytransit.com/html/rainfall_detours.html

Highway closures: 511alberta.ca

 

School closures:cbe.ab.ca and cssd.ab.ca


Provincial information on extreme rainfall measures, including river level advisories: alberta.ca/Extremerainfall.cfm


Planning for floods (from the Red Cross):

* Find out if you live in an area that could be affected and make a plan in case you are evacuated.

* Stay on upper floors if you haven’t been evacuated and wait for instructions from authorities.

* If you are in your car and away from home, be careful when driving and get to an elevated area. Stay away from streams and rivers.

 

If you live in one of the affected outlying communities, including Black Diamond, Turner Valley, High River, Okotoks, Canmore, Bragg Creek and Sundre, check your town website or social media feeds for the most up-to-date evacuation and flood information.

FM

As soldiers deploy, Redford urges Albertans to heed evacuation orders

Andy Johnson, CTVNews.ca Staff, Published Friday, June 21, 2013 6:40AM EDT, Last Updated Friday, June 21, 2013 12:57PM EDT, Source
 
state of emergency in calgary
Alberta Premier Alison Redford, centre, addresses the media as Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi, left, and Alberta Municipal Affairs Minister Doug Griffiths look on during a press conference in Calgary, Alta., Friday, June 21, 2013. (Jeff McIntosh / THE CANADIAN PRESS)

Alberta Premier Alison Redford called on residents of flood-hit regions of the province to heed evacuation orders and head to higher ground, though she acknowledged it's not easy to abandon one's home.

 

Redford spoke in Calgary on Friday morning as word emerged that the Canadian Forces was deploying 1,200 troops to help in the worst-hit areas of Alberta, and that an estimated 75,000 Calgarians had been ordered to evacuate.

 

"When that is asked, people really must leave, although it is an extremely difficult thing to do," Redford said, calling the flooding an "absolutely tragic situation."

 

Redford also pledged that the province will be there to help flood victims recover from the damage. She said she had also spoken to Prime Minister Stephen Harper, who gave a similar promise that disaster relief will be forthcoming.

 

Harper's office confirmed Friday afternoon the prime minister was on his way to Calgary to tour the flood damage along with Redford.

 

Across southern Alberta, more than a dozen towns have declared states of emergency and some entire communities, including High River and Bragg Creek, were under mandatory evacuation orders.

 

In Calgary, both the Bow River and Elbow River were at flood level, turning the city’s core into a watery mess with cars submerged and debris floating through the downtown. Gas and electricity was shut off across the downtown.

 

Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi said the Bow River "looks like an ocean at the moment" but said it appears to have reached a plateau, and is expected to remain steady at a flow rate of about 1,500 cubic metres per second for the next 12 hours.

 

The Elbow River has crested and has a current flow rate of 650 cubic metres per second, Nenshi said.

 

"The good news is that it is slowly reducing. We have peaked and we are seeing a slow decrease," Nenshi said, adding the river level could rise again due to a "surge" in flow.

 

"We have the situation under control as much as the situation can be under control."

 

Calgary is one of 12 Alberta communities to issue a state of emergency as surging waters grip the region.

 

Soldiers on the way

Earlier Friday, CTV News reported that 600 Canadian Forces members are en route to lend a hand in the hardest-hit areas of Alberta, with another 600 preparing to deploy by the end of the day.

 

The soldiers, a mix of regular troops and reservists from Edmonton are being sent to High River, Canmore and Kananaskis.

 

"The military is going to call them in to help with the evacuation effort and then later to help with negotiating the terrain. A military source tells me the military has the equipment they need to be able to move people around the very rough and rugged terrain," said CTV News Channel's Mercedes Stephenson.

 

"The military is ideally suited to be there."

 

Stephenson said the first soldiers are expected to arrive Friday morning to conduct reconnaissance and determine where the remaining troops force can best be deployed.

 

Canmore's Cougar Creek

West of Calgary, in Canmore, the situation was dire, with entire homes at risk of washing away as the swollen Cougar Creek began eroding its banks and creeping up on houses along the waterway.

 

Gerald Walsh was among those forced to evacuate as the rising river began to threaten his home.

 

“Given a limited amount of time, we had to evacuate. You really don’t get to grab much, pictures, some memorabilia, a little bit of clothes. It’s amazing how little the material things mean to you, so we just grabbed maybe two buckets of stuff,” Walsh said.

 

Evacuated residents in Canmore were effectively trapped in the community, unable to head east due to a mudslide blocking the TransCanada Highway, or west to Banff due to washed out bridges that made the town inaccessible.

 

As a result, residents had to pull together and help where they could. Spaces were set up for evacuees at the local civic centre and Canmore Collegiate High School.

 

“Everyone has really come together and they’re helping everyone out as much as possible. It’s really refreshing and it makes it a lot easier for all of us who are affected by these floodwaters,” Walsh said.

 

The military was called in by the RCMP to help with evacuations in some hard-hit communities, including High River, sending two helicopters and a Hercules aircraft to pull stranded residents from rooftops.

 

High River is located south of Calgary and was one of the hardest hit communities in the province, along with Turner Valley and Black Diamond. In Black Diamond, two people were swept away by the Highwood River. One was found but a woman is still missing.

 

Environment Canada has issued a rainfall warning for parts of southern Alberta, forecasting up to 100 millimetres of rain in the next two days.

FM

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