A flood watch covering a large swath of B.C.’s Southern Interior, including the Okanagan, has been cancelled.
The warning, which covered Mission Creek and tributaries in and around the Okanagan, was rescinded by the province on Wednesday.
“The low-pressure system that impacted the B.C. Central Interior over the past few days has moved on,” said B.C.’s Ministry of Environment.
“Warmer and drier conditions are anticipated through the rest of this week.”
It added that, in most areas, flood hazards have diminished as snowmelt and rainfall runoff have eased.
Get daily National news
“Most rivers in the Nicola, Bonaparte, North Thompson, Similkameen and Okanagan (regions) have reached peak levels and are now receding.”
Also ended was a flood watch for the Similkameen region, including the Ashnola and Tulameen rivers.
However, not all flood watches for the Southern Interior have been cancelled.
- Applicants for child care operator licences in Saskatchewan say they’re being denied
- More than $500M likely required annually for Calgary to meet affordable housing targets
- First-ever Saskatchewan commodity showcase connects producers with global buyers
- Montreal-area family hopes daughter’s cancer journey inspires blood donors
The River Forecast Centre is maintaining its flood watch for the Shuswap River, the South Thompson River (and its tributaries near Salmon Arm, Sicamous and Enderby).
The ministry said the Shuswap River in Enderby is currently flowing at 475 cubic metres a second, which is approaching a 10-year flow, but is projected to be near peak levels on Wednesday.
More information is available on the River Forecast Centre website.
Comments
Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.