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B.C. climate change initiative needs to look further than recovery, expert says

VICTORIA — A disaster expert who led recovery teams after the earthquake and tsunami in the Indian Ocean that killed more than 230,000 people says British Columbia's climate response strategy must protect the province from future environmental events.

The B.C. government introduced a plan this week that recognizes the forces of climate change are driving threats facing communities, but the province must do more than implement recovery programs, said Prof. Jean Slick, who heads the disaster and emergency management program at Royal Roads University in Victoria.

"B.C. is a leader in being able to come out so directly in addressing the whole issue of recognizing how climate change is interwoven with the kinds of threats we face, in particular flood and fire," she said in an interview.

However, she said the human element that shouldn't be missed is that governments are allowing people to build on flood plains or in fire zones. 

"What we really want to see going forward is that we take action to stop creating disaster risks."

Finance Minister Selina Robinson said the B.C. budget tabled this week includes $2.1 billion to fund disaster recovery efforts and future responses to the threats posed by wildfires, floods, and heat waves.

The three-year climate fund will support ongoing disaster cleanup and rebuilding in southern B.C. communities hit by last November's floods and mudslides, she said.

The heavy rains resulted in floods that deluged farming operations in the Fraser Valley, forced evacuations in Merritt and Princeton and crippled major rail and highway routes.

The village of Lytton was destroyed last June in a fire that occurred the day after the village posted the highest temperature in Canadian history. 

Robinson and three other New Democrat cabinet ministers attended a news conference Thursday to provide more details of climate recovery and response initiatives funded in the budget.

Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth said Emergency Program Act funding will increase to $436 million from $36 million to support flood recovery costs and response activities that include debris removal, cleanup and dike repairs.

The BC Wildfire Service will become a year-round firefighting and risk mitigation operation that will add people and equipment to focus on prevention and response services in wildfires and other emergencies, he said.

The climate strategy also includes a $120-million community emergency preparedness fund to assist communities and First Nations with emergency preparedness and mitigation, said Farnworth. 

"It's also important to note that the challenges we've faced over the recent years, the consecutive wildfires and flooding events and the COVID-19 pandemic have disproportionately impacted Indigenous communities and it is critical we work side-by-side and in partnership with First Nations to advance reconciliation by improving emergency management supports," he said.

Environment Minister George Heyman said the budget includes money to expand the River Forecast Centre and flood plain mapping program to provide communities with more timely and accurate weather information and to help identify areas where dikes and other protections should be strengthened or located.

"It's not enough to react," Heyman said. "We need to be able to predict. We need to be able to prepare and we need to be able to invest. The message is absolutely clear: we're not waiting another decade or two to see the impacts of climate change."

Slick said she spent two years working on recovery projects in the countries impacted by the 2004 Boxing Day earthquake and tsunami that hit Sri Lanka and Indonesia.

"I've seen the ultimate devastation that can be caused when you have both an earthquake and tsunami," she said."I would say, just imagine if you could take your hand and wipe it across the community and everything's gone."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 24, 2022.

Dirk Meissner, The Canadian Press