Regional districts want more disaster funding from Emergency Management B.C.
CBC
An alert system is being installed on a slope scorched by fire in British Columbia's Interior, allowing an early warning for the residents below if the deforested hillside gives way in heavy rain.
The $30,000 in funding from the province for the system in Sicamous, B.C., is an example of what some provincial regional districts say is much better spent on prevention, rather than spending millions in reaction to landslides, fires and floods.
The Columbia Shuswap Regional District is installing the alert system, and Derek Sutherland, the district's team leader of protective services, said the cost of such projects can be prohibitive.
"They're not inexpensive, but in the absence of any substantive mitigating work, they're a must-have,'' he said.
Sutherland said he's heard from other districts that are interested in installing preventive or post-disaster systems, but the funding from Emergency Management B.C. isn't available.
Emergency Management B.C. is part of the Public Safety Ministry and co-ordinates the response to disasters, including wildfires, flooding and landslides.
"EMBC is struggling with how it's funding these early-warning systems,'' Sutherland said.
The Fraser Valley Regional District passed a motion in February calling on the province and Emergency Management B.C. to raise the disaster financial assistance cap — which hasn't changed in 26 years while property values have soared — to help affected property owners.
While FVRD staff do not suggest that the province should fully underwrite the risk for these kinds of events, "$300,000 does not come close to meeting the needs of affected residents,'' reads the motion approved unanimously by the 22 members present at the meeting.
Regional districts are unique in Canada and were created in the mid-1960s to allow for greater co-operation between area cities or municipalities. They now oversee a variety of services, from water supply to regional parks, and their boards are generally made up of directors elected to local governments.
The complaints about funding come after wildfires raced through the province last summer, destroying numerous homes and much of the village of Lytton.
Torrential rains then descended over southern B.C. in November pushing rivers past their breaking point, setting off landslides, washing away swaths of highways and flooding communities.
Kevin Skrepnek, director of the Thompson-Nicola Regional District's emergency operations centre, said the province needs to provide better support before and after natural disasters.
"Broadly speaking, where we do run into frustrations is the current emergency management legislation in the province is very response-focused,'' he said in an interview. "If it's not an imminent risk or imminent threat, that's where it gets into the grey area.''