Indigenous nation closes bridge over B.C.'s Chilcotin River - Action News
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British Columbia

Indigenous nation closes bridge over B.C.'s Chilcotin River

AbridgeoverBritishColumbia'sChilcotin River is closed to traffic until further notice after new cracks were discovered near a massive landslide that had blocked the river for days before a breach sent torrents of water and debris downstream.

New riverbank cracks were discovered near a massive landslide that blocked the river for days

An aerial view of the confluence of two rivers: the smaller one is full of wood debris.
An aerial view of the confluence of the Chilcotin and Fraser rivers in B.C.'s Cariboo region. Debris can be seen entering the Fraser River from the Chilcotin River around 2 p.m. PT on Aug. 5, 2024, after water breached a dam created by a landslide almost a week earlier. (Government of British Columbia)

AbridgeoverBritishColumbia'sChilcotin River is closed to traffic until further notice after new cracks were discovered near a massive landslide that had blocked the river for days before a breach sent torrents of water and debris downstream.

The Tsilhqot'in National Government posted a notice on social media Friday, saying thebridgeat Farwell Canyon south of Williams Lake is closed due to concerns for public safety.

Chief Joe Alphonse, Tsilhqot'in National Government tribal chair, and Nathan Cullen,B.C.'s water, land and resource stewardship minister, said Thursday there were concerns about future slides and unstable banks along the river near the landslide site.

Alphonse said there were concerns that rainfall could trigger new slides.

Environment Canada's weather forecast for the coming week at Williams Lake shows the chance of daily rain showers from 30 per cent to 60 per cent from Saturday to Thursday.

The landslide dammed the Chilcotin River last week before breaking free on Monday, sending water, trees and debris downstream into the connecting Fraser River, which flows through the Lower Mainland to Georgia Strait.

Flood advisories along both the Fraser and Chilcotin rivers were lifted Thursday as flows returned to normal levels, said Connie Chapman,B.C. water management branch executive director.

Impact on migrating salmon

Local First Nations,B.C. government and Fisheries Department officials say they are also trying to assess the slide's potential impact on migrating salmon, but the area remains too unstable at the moment.

Alphonse and Cullen said the Chilcotin River appears to have carved new paths after the landslide that could make it difficult for migrating salmon heading to upstream spawning areas.

Cullen said plans are already underway to assist salmon through a difficult bottleneck area created by the raging river after the landslide, but government officials and Indigenous leaders are waiting to see if the choke point will clear itself in the coming days.

A massive rock slide in 2019 on the Fraser River at Big Bar, downstream from the Chilcotin River, saw officials catch and transport salmon past the site to continue their migration.

Fallen trees sit in a lake of dirty water
A landslide along the Chilcotin River near Williams Lake, B.C. is shown in this recent handout photo. An expert on British Columbia's salmon populations says the massive landslide that blocked off part of Canada's largest sockeye salmon run has created an unprecedented situation potentially putting the already struggling fish at even more risk. (Central Cariboo Search and Rescue/The Canadian Press)

First Nations acrossB.C. are also concerned about the slide's possible impact on migrating salmon, said Bob Chamberlin, First Nations Wild Salmon Alliance chairman.

"It's been said to me that 90 per cent of all First Nations inB.C. rely on salmon," he said in an interview. "When you take a look at how many nations are on the Fraser River, the challenges that nature's introducing are huge."

Chamberlin said every effort must be made to ensure the Chilcotin River salmon can make it to spawning grounds.

The Fisheries Department said in a statement Friday it is working with First Nations and theB.C. government to assess the potential effects of the slide on salmon.

"The Chilcotin River is a major tributary to the Fraser River and supports populations of early timed chinook, early summer sockeye, summer run sockeye, Interior Fraser coho and steelhead, several of which are stocks of conservation concern," said the statement. "Due to the current high sediment load and decrease in water quality, adult chinook and sockeye salmon in the Chilcotin system have only been observed upstream of the slide."

The department said the majority of adult sockeye salmon are expected to arrive at the confluence of the Chilcotin and Fraser rivers around the third week in August.

Adult coho salmon migrate into the Fraser River watershed in early fall and are not expected to arrive in the Chilcotin River area until mid-September, said the statement.

"At this point, the site is not safe to access and it is too early to determine what measures may be required or possible," the department said. "Actions toaddress impacts to salmon habitat will depend on the scopeofeffects, once known, and will be undertakenin collaborationwith local First Nations andthe Province ofB.C., once it is safe to do so."