B.C. mudslide victims eligible for $300K - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. mudslide victims eligible for $300K

The B.C. government has approved disaster financial assistance for home and property owners hit by Sunday's mudslide in the South Okanagan, meaning homeowners are eligible for up to $300,000 compensation..
B.C. Public Safety Minister Mike de Jong on Tuesday toured the area hit by a massive wall of mud and water. ((CBC))

The B.C. government has approvedfinancial aidforproperty owners hit by Sunday's mudslide in the South Okanagan, meaning homeowners are each eligible forup to $300,000 compensation.

B.C. Public Safety Minister Mike de Jong visited thedevastatedfarming communityTuesday, where five homes and several farm buildings were destroyed and several others were damaged when a massive mudslide swept through on Sunday.

Officials have blamed the slide on the failure of an irrigation reservoir in the mountains above the farming community.

"It's very sad,"de Jong said after the tour. "Some people have lived here for 20 or 30 years and in 20 minutes they see it all destroyed like this."

De Jong saidprovincial officials will meet with the affected residents immediatelyto brief them on the application process forprovincial assistance.

The emergency services program provides up to 80 per cent compensation to eligible homeowners, residential tenants, farmers, small businesses and charitable organizations when property is damaged by uninsurable disasters, including certain floods and mudslides.

Some of those affected by the mudslide would likelybe able to make separate claims for both their private homes and their businesses,meaning they would be eligible for more than $300,000 in compensation, said De Jong.

De Jong said the investigation into the slide is underway.

"What happened, how did it happen, why did it happen and could it have been prevented? These are the questions we are looking into and want answers to."

Hundredsof reservoirs could pose risks

Meanwhile, a UBC professor from the school's Okanagan campus who toured the site of Sunday's mudslide says theslide should be taken as a warning of other hidden dangers in the hills.

The mudslide on Sunday left a field of debris up to several hundred metres wide across several Oliver-area farms. ((CBC))
Geo-technical engineer Dwayne Tannant said the slide illustrates how a relatively small amount of water from a man-made reservoir can cause massive destruction.

He suggested work needs to be done to prevent similar disasters from occurring elsewhere in the Okanagan.

"Given that we've got literally hundreds of these small reservoirs scattered in the high country around the Okanagan Valley, it's probably prudent to do a little bit of hazard assessment of these watersheds," he said.

Officials say thereservoir was built in the 1930s but failed after heavy rains in recent weeks breached its embankments.