Home washed away in B.C. mudslide, owner missing: Police

2 hours ago 9

Author of the article:

Canadian Press

Canadian Press

Brenna Owen

Published Oct 20, 2024  •  2 minute read

A man uses an umbrella to shield himself from the rain while walking on the Stanley Park seawall across the water from downtown Vancouver, B.C., Saturday, Oct. 19, 2024.A man uses an umbrella to shield himself from the rain while walking on the Stanley Park seawall across the water from downtown Vancouver, B.C., Saturday, Oct. 19, 2024. Photo by DARRYL DYCK /THE CANADIAN PRESS

First responders in Coquitlam, B.C., spent much of the weekend searching for a person who is missing after their home was washed away in a mudslide triggered by torrential rain across British Columbia’s south coast.

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Officers responded to a report of the slide along Quarry Rd. on the east side of Pinecone Burke Provincial Park at about 12:30 p.m. Saturday, Coquitlam RCMP said in a statement issued the next day.

The slide washed away one home, and Cpl. Alexa Hodgins with the Coquitlam detachment said it’s believed the home was occupied at the time.

The Mounties said they were communicating with the homeowner’s family.

The slide has rendered the road impassable, cutting off several other residents who confirmed with emergency personnel that they were sheltering in place.

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B.C.’s River Forecast Centre, meanwhile, downgraded flood warnings Sunday for the Coquitlam River and waterways on southwestern Vancouver Island.

Lower-level flood watches cover the southern half of Vancouver Island and the rest of the province’s south coast, including the Sunshine Coast, Metro Vancouver, the Sea to Sky corridor and the Lower Fraser River and its tributaries.

An update from the centre said additional rainfall was expected Sunday night as a “second and final pulse of moist air” moves from the coast to the Interior.

The atmospheric river weather system that lashed B.C.’s south coast on the day of the provincial election sent daily rainfall records tumbling on Saturday.

Environment Canada figures showed new daily rainfall records were set in Victoria, Squamish, Vancouver, West Vancouver, White Rock, Langley, Abbotsford, Chilliwack, Hope, Nakusp in the Interior, and the Agassiz and Pitt Meadows areas.

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West Vancouver saw 134.6 mm of rain, smashing the record of 34.8 mm set in 1970, and images posted to social media in the city on Saturday showed a surge of brown floodwater flowing down a sloping street.

Environment Canada figures released Sunday afternoon showed Coquitlam had seen 233 mm of rain since Friday, while West Vancouver had seen 190 mm and just over 160 mm fell in the Vancouver harbour area.

On Vancouver Island, the weather office said the Kennedy Lake area north of Ucluelet had seen a whopping 317 mm of rainfall since Friday.

Environment Canada lifted rainfall warnings across the south coast later Sunday, while a bulletin remains in effect in the West Kootenay and Columbia regions, including a stretch of the Trans Canada Highway between Revelstoke and Golden.

The BC Hydro outage map showed several thousand customers without power in the Thompson and Shuswap regions of the southern Interior, along with nearly 2,000 customers on Vancouver Island heading into Sunday night.

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