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Flood situation stable thanks to weather

Dry, sunny weather was helping flood fighters in

Manitoba where the province on Monday declared the swollen

Assiniboine River was near its peak in western regions and would

soon start to slowly drop.

The government also downgraded its plan to pump up to 3,000 cubic

feet per second from a deliberate dike breach at the Hoop and Holler

Bend near Portage la Prairie.

The water was still being allowed out – but at a rate below the

initial 500 cubic feet per second announced last week. Officials

said the flow would not top 1,000 cubic feet per second, barring any

emergencies.

"(The change) will reduce the area in which the water will

spread and will increase the time it will take to reach the La Salle

River," Steve Topping, an executive director with the province’s

Water Stewardship department, said Monday.

The deliberate flood was already spreading very slowly since it

began Saturday. On Monday, it was spreading like molasses in

January.

The water had topped one road southeast of the dike break and had

entered into a couple more farm fields. But it had not reached any

additional homes. The same three homes that were surrounded by

water, but not flooded, on Sunday remained safe. In total, the water

had only spread 2.1 square kilometres since Saturday morning.

For the time being, the government was standing by its original

estimate that the deliberate flood could threaten 150 homes, but

that number could be reduced, according to Chuck Sanderson with the

Emergency Measures Organization.

The water was moving so slowly, it is now expected to take well

over a week to make its way into the La Salle River, a tributary of

the less-swollen Red River system, near the town of Elie.

Despite the good news, officials warned there could still be

trouble in the weeks to come.

"We have made significant progress … but by no means are we

done with this yet," said Infrastructure Minister Steve Ashton.

One of the biggest concerns is along the shores of Lake Manitoba.

Water on the lake is near record levels because of high natural

runoff and water that is being diverted from the Assiniboine through

a channel near Portage La Prairie.

Last week, strong winds from the north caused high waves to

threaten lakefront cottage properties and prompted crews to ramp up

sandbagging efforts. The calm summer-like weather on Monday meant

the area was trouble-free, but Ashton warned the water will remain

high on the lake for weeks, and any severe wind storms could cause

damage.

In Brandon, the Assiniboine is expected to start dropping very

slowly by the end of this week, but it could remain above low-lying

areas, which are being protected by dikes, for weeks. Some 1,300

people who have been evacuated from the city’s valley have yet to be

told when they can return home.

Manitoba has battled flooding across the southern portion of the

province since April, but its series of dikes, ditches and diversion

channels have kept most of the water on fields and away from

buildings.

Thousands of people were evacuated this season, mostly as a

precaution, from aboriginal reserves where roads were being swamped.

In all, roughly 100 homes have been flooded and only 10 have had

water above the basement level.

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