'Above-average' flooding could hit Ottawa region this spring - Action News
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Ottawa

'Above-average' flooding could hit Ottawa region this spring

A City of Ottawa task forceis monitoringwater levels ahead of the spring thaw and says there's no major flooding in the immediate forecast but that could change in the weeks ahead.

Task force has watched water levels each year since the big floods of 2017

Soldiers in the flooded waters walking with a boat.
Canadian soldiers work to hold back floodwaters on the Ottawa River in Fitzroy Harbour, Ont., on Monday, April 29, 2019. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

A City of Ottawa task forceis monitoringwater levels ahead of the spring thaw and says there's no major flooding in the immediate forecast but that could change in the weeks ahead.

Water levels are currently normal or close to normal, according to the joint Thursday memo from public works general manager Alain Gonthier and Kim Ayotte, general manager of emergency and protective services.

"As members of council are aware, the Ottawa River basin experienced above average amounts of rainfall and snowpack during the peak of the freshet in past years, and as a result, the [city] experienced prolonged flooding events," their memo said.

A freshet is alarge increase in water discharged into a river during the spring, caused by melting snow and sometimes rainfall.The city has established a freshettask force each year since major floods hit the Ottawa area in 2017.

Heavy flooding again struck the region in 2019, prompting the city to declare a state of emergency and call for help from the Canadian Armed Forces.

Levels already rising in some upriver lakes

The Rideau Valley Conservation Authority (RVCA) is one partner currently working with the task force.

In a statement Thursday, the RVCAsaid an unusually mild and snowy winter hascaused water levels to rise in some lakes upriver ofOttawa.

The current snowpack varies across the Rideau Valley watershed but is heaviest in the Ottawa area, according to the RVCA.

"Based solely on the fact we have above-average snow water content and above-normal water levels in some upper watershed lakes, there is potential for above-average flooding this spring," the statement said.

Any floods wouldlikely impact low-lying areas with a history of flooding, the authorityadded. But the melt is unlikely to begin immediately, as the first half of March is forecast to be cold and dry.

City crews have already begun the annual ice removal on the Rideau River between Rideau Falls and Bronson Avenue.