Evacuation order for Chilcotin River landslide area downgraded - Action News
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British Columbia

Evacuation order for Chilcotin River landslide area downgraded

Residents can return home now that an evacuation order following a landslide that blocked a British Columbia river for days has been downgraded.

Cariboo Regional District still warning residents not to interfere with monitoring activity

A river on a sunny day.
A remote camera downstream of the landslide shows levels of the Chilcotin River starting to return to normal on the morning of Aug. 8. (Government of British Columbia)

Residents along the Chilcotin River in British Columbia's Cariboo region can return home now that an evacuation order issued when a landslide blocked the waterway for days has been downgraded.

The Cariboo Regional District issued the evacuation order on July 31 for 34 parcels of land along the river due to thelandslide and declared a state of local emergency.

The evacuation order covered a stretch of the river about 30 kilometres long and spanning nearly 73 square kilometres.

The district says the order has been downgraded to an evacuation alert,but it's warning residents not to interfere with any monitoring activity as landslide and river assessment is still ongoing in the area.

The district is also asking people to be aware of additional slides or flooding.

WATCH | Chilcotin River landslide damages cabins:

First Nations, officials assess damage after Chilcotin River landslide

2 months ago
Duration 1:43
Water and debris surged down the Fraser River Tuesday after water breached a natural dam, caused by a landslide, upstream in the Chilcotin River. As Yasmine Ghania reports, multiple emergency alerts have been issued, and debris is forecast to make its way to the Lower Mainland by Tuesday night.

B.C.'s minister of emergency management and climate readiness said in a news conference on Tuesday that there is still concernabout the impactof the Chilcotin River landslide.

Bowinn Ma says the province is monitoring salmon stocks as the fish head up the Fraser River and into the Chilcotin, and they are monitoring the banks of both rivers to ensure any additional slumping doesn't create new challenges to fish passage.