Statement from Mayor Nenshi regarding flood recovery announcement from Premier Prentice
We are pleased that the Premier has made flood recovery and mitigation a
major priority, but we are surprised at the scope of the announcement, as it
represents a significant departure from previous policy, and it was announced
without prior discussion with the City's flood experts or policy-makers. The
Premier, just yesterday, announced he would be treating municipalities as true
partners. We look forward to that.
We are pleased that the Premier announced that the government is
tripling the number of appeal officers for the Disaster Recovery Program. This
will make a real difference for the families affected by the flood. We hope
that when processing these appeals, the Provincial government will address the
legitimate concerns that have been raised by flood affected families and that
their claims will be re-assessed properly, fairly and quickly.
With respect to the two flood mitigation measures for Calgary
that were announced by Premier Prentice today - namely the dry reservoir in
Springbank and the direction to negotiate a permanent water management
agreement with TransAlta - it is difficult for us to comment in detail since
The City of Calgary has not yet been consulted with respect to either proposal
and our experts have not yet seen any engineering studies.
However, we do have a few initial observations:
1.
The "room for the
river" concept for the Springbank reservoir, while intriguing, has never been discussed
with City officials. It represents a real departure from the previous plan,
where the reservoir would have played a role in both flood and drought years.
This dry dam would not be used except during a flood and would not allow for
comprehensive water management, which the Province had previously stated was
their goal for this project.
2.
We are very
interested to hear the Premier state that management of the existing TransAlta
dams will offer 1:100 year flood protection and that the Springbank dry dam
will offer 1:200 year flood protection. We will be asking Provincial officials
to share their engineering studies that demonstrate that. Based on our research
and analysis to date, we believe that at least two and maybe all three proposed
large scale flood mitigation measures will be required (namely, Springbank,
McLean Creek and the Glenmore Reservoir Tunnel). It is surprising that
the Province would announce one project without having completed the analysis
on the impact of the other two projects, since they all must be analyzed
together. For example, using hypothetical numbers, it may be that the tunnel
could be double the cost of the other projects but it may mean that either or both
other projects would no longer be needed. The cost-benefit analyses cannot
stand alone.
3.
The Government of
Canada in a recent study indicated that 1:100 year standard is no longer
appropriate. Calgary needs protection to a much higher level. Recent
discussions with Provincial officials have been focused on mitigation at a
significantly higher standard.
The floods had a devastating impact on our community and it is very
important that we make the right decisions with respect to flood mitigation
projects. Teams from the City and the Province have been working very
collaboratively under the previous two Premiers and we hope that continues
under the "new management".
- Mayor Naheed Nenshi
- Mayor Naheed Nenshi
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