A Sunday night rock slide that closed a major highway in both directions outside Keremeos, B.C., has also caused damage to an area home.
The Okanagan-Similkameen Regional District confirmed Monday that windows on one mobile home were damaged when rocks came tumbling down between Highway 3 and the Similkameen River within hours of the slide.
Officials said that nobody was injured and the damage was relatively contained. That said, there are concerns that more rocks may fall and an evacuation order that currently affects two homes, may be extended as the day goes on.
Jim Zaffino, RDOS Emergency Operations Centre Director, said there are around two dozen homes affected in the area, and that translates to around 32 people in the area. Those who have left are being directed to Princeton, where resources are set up.
Until they’ve done an assessment, the portion of Highway 3 affected will remain closed.
“Right now we have a geotech that is evaluating the risk,” Zaffino said.
“And once a risk is evaluated, we will be looking at possibly opening the road or the Minister of Transportation will be looking at opening up the road.”
DriveBC, the province’s online traveller information system, is not estimating when the highway might reopen and is proposing a detour that involves a route through Merritt and West Kelowna, adding more than 300 kilometres to the journey.
The regional district has imposed a state of local emergency for the rural area roughly halfway between the village of Keremeos and the community of Hedley.
Fortis BC, which provides electricity in the region, said earlier the “unstable ground conditions” caused a power outage affecting 114 customers.
-with files from CP