Canada Tries a Forceful Message for Flood Victims: Live Someplace Else  By   Christopher Flavelle Published Sept. 10, 2019 Updated Sept. 11, 2019
  GATINEAU,   Quebec — Along the coast of the United States, people who lost homes  to  Hurricane Dorian are preparing to rebuild. But Canada — which has  faced  devastating flooding of its own — is testing a very different  idea of  disaster recovery: Forcing people to move.
  Unlike  the  United States, which will repeatedly help pay for people to rebuild  in  place, Canada has responded to the escalating costs of climate  change  by limiting aid after disasters, and even telling people to leave  their  homes. It is an experiment that has exposed a complex mix of  relief,  anger and loss as entire neighborhoods are removed, house by  house. 
  “Canadians  are stubbornly  beginning to reconsider the wisdom of building near  flood-prone areas,”  said Jason Thistlethwaite, a professor of  environment and business at  the University of Waterloo in Ontario.  “It’s taking government action to  obligate people to make better  decisions.”
  The  real-world consequences of that philosophy are  playing out in Gatineau,  a city across the river from Ottawa that has  been hit by two  100-year-floods since 2017. Residents here are waiting  for officials to  tell them if the damage from the latest flood, in  April, exceeded 50  percent of the value of those homes. Those who get  that notice will be  offered some money and told to leave. 
  In many cases, residents are fine with that.
  “I’m   very happy,” said Louise David, who just learned that the government   will force her to take a buyout. “I don’t want to live this again.”
  Canada’s   approach offers lessons for the United States, where the quickening   tempo and growing force of storms such as Dorian has strained government   budgets. 
  Dorian is the third  hurricane to strike North  Carolina in four years. Many of the places  inundated this time, such as  Ocracoke Island in the Outer Banks, had  been hit by one of the earlier  storms as well, only to rebuild and then  flood again. 
  The cost  of that  approach is growing. As of last year, the United States had  36,774  houses and other buildings the government describes as “severe   repetitive loss properties,” homes that have flooded and repaired at  least twice,  according to data from the Natural Resources Defense  Council. More than  1,100 of those are in North Carolina; the average  such home has been  flooded five times. 
  The Canadian approach is very different.
  “What   everybody would like is for the problem to not exist. But it does,”   said David Foster, spokesman for the Canadian Home Builders’   Association, which supports the steps that officials in Canada are   taking. “We expect government will behave maturely, and sometimes that   means taking an approach that is difficult but wise.”
  By most  accounts,  Canada’s experiment began in the summer of 2013, when floods  in  southern Alberta caused more than 7.5 billion Canadian dollars, or  about  $5.7 billion, in damage, the most expensive disaster in the  country’s  history at the time. The toll was particularly great in High  River, a  town of 14,000 about an hour south of Calgary where floods  affected 80  percent of homes. 
  Rather than pay to rebuild them all, officials issued mandatory buyouts for two particularly exposed neighborhoods. 
  Not   all residents were on board. “Those were some of the worst meetings   I’ve ever been involved in, telling people they’ve got to leave their   homes,” said Craig Snodgrass, High River’s mayor, who supported the   buyouts. 
  Still, the homes came down. 
  Mr.  Snodgrass says  that the city as a whole is now better protected.  “You’ve got to make  the decision for the greater good of the community,”  he said. “This is  going to happen again. The water is coming, folks.”
  That   philosophy spread. In 2015, Canada made it harder for lower levels of   government to get federal money after disasters. The next year, British   Columbia said flood victims who had chosen not to buy private flood   insurance would be ineligible for government aid.
  This year the  federal government went further still, warning that homeowners  nationwide would eventually be on their own.  If people deliberately  rebuild in danger zones, at some point “they are  going to have to  assume their own responsibility for the cost burden,”  Public Security  Minister Ralph Goodale told reporters in April. “You  can’t repeatedly  go back to the taxpayer and say, ‘Oh, it happened  again.’”
  continues at  nytimes.com |