Heavy rainfall and overflowing rivers have inundated cities in the Canadian province. In Abbotsford, residents took shelter in a convention center.
Torrential rains and flooding that have battered British Columbia were blamed for the death of a woman in a mudslide and for hundreds of people being stranded on highways, the authorities said Tuesday.
The woman’s body was recovered late Monday from the remnants of a mudslide that happened that morning on Highway 99 near Lillooet, British Columbia, about 150 miles northeast of Vancouver, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said in a statement on Tuesday. The death was the first to be reported during the storms that hit the Pacific Northwest beginning late last week.
“Investigators have received two missing people reports and believe there may have been other occupied vehicles that were lost in the slide,” Sgt. Janelle Shoihet, a spokeswoman for the Mounted Police in British Columbia, said in the statement.
Rescue crews recovered seven vehicles from the mudslide site, which was strewn with debris and trees, David MacKenzie, a manager for the Pemberton District Search and Rescue, said in an interview on Tuesday. He said the woman’s death was the only fatality or injury he knew of so far.
“It’s very overwhelming how much debris there is covering the area,” he said.
Crews were continuing to search the area on Tuesday and were waiting for “heavy equipment” to arrive to remove the debris, Mr. MacKenzie said.
In Abbotsford, a city of about 162,000 people near the border between Canada and the United States, heavy rainfall set off mudslides and flooding in many areas of the city, the authorities there said. No injuries were reported, but four people were rescued from kayaks on Tuesday as they paddled in an area under an evacuation order, the city’s police department said on Twitter.
Residents were told late on Monday to leave their homes and take shelter in a convention center and at a high school in nearby Chilliwack.
Mayor Henry Braun of Abbotsford said at a news conference on Tuesday that evacuation orders had been extended to include up to 1,100 homes. He said the authorities in his city, with help from those in Chilliwack, were “doing everything that we can to minimize the impact of the flooding.”
“The flooding and mudslides have left a number of people displaced,” he said, adding that Highway 1, a major link between Abbotsford and Chilliwack, was closed.
More than 80 families seeking shelter had checked in to the Fraser Valley Trade and Exhibition Center, he added. “This is an uncertain and scary time for people who have been affected,” he said.
Rescues continued on Tuesday, but emergency officials said that high floodwaters had hampered them. Cars were overturned and roadways were impassable. Houses had been slammed by mudslides, and workers tried to plug culverts to stave off the flow, Mr. Braun said.
Abbotsford borders the town of Sumas, in Washington State, where highways were also inundated and rivers swelled to the brink of their banks.
Water from the Nooksack River in Washington State was crossing into Canada, flowing north and east and then pouring into the Sumas Prairie, Mr. Braun said. The water levels had risen “dramatically,” he said, cutting off communities with no end in sight.
“Once it’s full, it keeps flowing over the sides,” he said.
Loren Taves, a farmer in Abbotsford, said that while his family’s farm in the Highlands neighborhood was not affected by the floodwaters, his brother’s currant farm in the Sumas Prairie was underwater. Earlier, his brother texted him an image of a red barn, half submerged in water, a scene he described as simultaneously “serene and perverse.”
The Fraser Valley region, which includes Abbotsford, is dense with farms that raise poultry and grow products like berries, Mr. Taves said.
“Those farms are definitely in big trouble with rising waters inside the barns. What do you do for your cattle? What if a feed truck can’t come in and bring food for your chickens?” Mr. Taves said, adding that the valley’s main artery, Highway 1, was entirely deluged with water. “It’s a situation where you’re cut off from the supply chain, and you can’t do anything about it,” he said.
Hundreds of people were rescued from highways in British Columbia on Monday, officials said, after the torrential rain set off mudslides that trapped people in their cars and prompted evacuations.
Officials said that about 275 people who had been stuck since Sunday evening on Highway 7 near Agassiz, a small community east of Vancouver, had been taken to safety by helicopter. The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reported that the rescue operation had ended by nightfall.
The efforts in Abbotsford resembled those in other parts of southern British Columbia. Residents of Merritt, a city of more than 7,000 people about 170 miles northeast of Vancouver, were told on Monday to leave their homes immediately after heavy rain caused the Coldwater River to spill its banks.
The weather system was caused by an atmospheric river, part of a convergence of storms so vast that it swept from California into Washington and southern British Columbia.
The weather system that dumped heavy rain and triggered mudslides in Washington State over the weekend was moving inland on Tuesday and was over central Canada, said Mike McFarland, a National Weather Service meteorologist based in Seattle.
A second surge of rain on Monday flooded river valleys, turning them into big ponds, Mr. McFarland added.
“We have dry weather today and we really don’t have any significant weather systems coming in for the next week,” he said. “It will give a chance for all the rivers to recede, and give people a chance to recover from the floods.”
Alyssa Lukpat contributed reporting.
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