With climate change, flooding events are becoming more common in the Lower Mainland. In Metro Vancouver, about half of the dikes that protect us from flooding “are in a poor state of repair, and most do not meet modern flood protection standards.” These dikes also do not meet seismic design standards, which is critical as our region is in an earthquake zone.
The 2021 Fraser Valley flooding resulted in $675 million in insurance claims and disrupted the movement of goods and people from the Lower Mainland to the rest of Canada. This is significant given that the Port of Vancouver is Canada's largest port. All this to say that our region is a trade corridor of national significance.
The provincial government has created a B.C. Flood Strategy, which is pending implementation.
Langley City Council received a presentation last night from the Lower Fraser Floodplains Coalition, which includes First Nation and local governments in the area. Their report noted that “a single major flood in the Lower Fraser could wipe out over $350 billion in economic value.”
With that in mind, they are calling on First Nation and local governments in the Lower Mainland to sign onto a joint statement which includes calling on the federal and provincial governments to:
Recognize the Lower Fraser’s resilience as a matter of national and provincial significance: urgently requiring attention, but manageable with practical measures, and essential for the long-term safety, and the cultural and economic well-being of all communities, the province and the country;
Recognize that collaboration, not competition for piecemeal funding, is the foundation for resilience in the Lower Fraser, and that enabling First Nations and local governments to work together to meet responsibilities to their communities that flow from title and rights and jurisdictions, is part of that foundation.
Address federal and provincial responsibilities to ensure the resilience of critical infrastructure essential for the region, for British Columbia and for Canada; and
Develop a sustained, long-term investment program for the Lower Fraser adequate to support collaborative work across federal, provincial and local governments, First Nations and the private sector to achieve regional floodplain resilience that works with nature, not against it.
Langley City Council approved the City's signing onto this joint statement last night. Other local governments that have signed onto the joint statement include the Metro Vancouver Regional District, Squamish-Lillooet Regional District, Port Coquitlam, and the Township of Langley.
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