Corp Comm Connects

 


Massive investments still required to solve city flooding
The city is about to do a major study on ways to protect its flood-prone lower city

cbc.ca
Sept. 1, 2015
By Samantha Craggs

The city is about to do a major study to try to protect its flood-prone lower city from a potential massive flood.

The stormwater and flooding master plan will focus on the lower city - particularly the east side - which low elevation dictates is one of Hamilton's most vulnerable areas in the event of a major rainstorm.

The effort is just the latest in a decade of multimillion dollar projects aimed at getting a handle on Hamilton's flooding issues.

In the last five years, the city has spend about $160 million on flood-related capital projects, and will spend another $407 million in the next five years.

Climate change means more floods are certainly on the way, said Dan McKinnon, director of Hamilton Water. And "we've never had a really bad storm hit us in the most vulnerable spots." That includes the lower city, with its aging infrastructure and the city georgraphy that brings water from upper areas of Hamilton.

Nothing ruled out
The wide-scale study could include tools from digital mapping to buying out homeowners, McKinnon said. He's not ruling anything out. "I don't want to dismiss any ideas as being stupid ideas."

The city will hire a consulting engineer for the project. The engineer will look at, among other factors, what areas of the city attract water flow.

Since 2009, city crews have inspected 85 per cent of its sanitary and storm sewer mains, or about 450 kilometres worth. There's also a new sewer lateral inspection program that looks at 14,000 private drains.

Other programs include:

More resources needed
A report to public works committee warns that despite the major investments, "there continues to be a lack of resources to manage the stormwater portfolio sustainably." And it notes that the group tasked with solving it is cutting back its activity levels because of lack of funding.

The threat of flooding remains. In August 2014, hundreds of homes flooded after a massive rainstorm in Burlington. If it had happened two kilometres closer, McKinnon said, Hamilton would have suffered that fate.

Two years ago, the Insurance Bureau of Canada even chose Hamilton as the launch point for a new Municipal Risk Assessment Tool (MRAT), which determines where future flooding will happen and how to prevent it.

But the city is making headway, said Coun. Sam Merulla of Ward 4, whose east-end ward has had a history of flooding. He's also chair of the public works committee.

That doesn't guarantee that flooding won't happen again, he said.

"What evidence suggests is we've come a long way."