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Lake Ontario water levels now 1.5 feet above normal: conservation authority

WATCH ABOVE: With Lake Ontario’s waters expected to rise, residents on Toronto’s Islands are getting ready for possible flooding. Matthew Bingley reports – May 4, 2019

The City of Hamilton, along with the Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority, continues to keep close tabs on Lake Ontario water levels.

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The NPCA says static water levels, which don’t account for storm surges and wind-driven waves, are currently 47 cm — or more than 1.5 feet — above average for this time of year.

The authority adds that water levels are expected to continue rising over the next few weeks because of restricted discharges at a power dam in Cornwall.

Those restrictions are an attempt to prevent further flooding along the St. Lawrence and Ottawa river systems.

Along Hamilton’s Waterfront Trail, a section of trail between Princess Point and the York Boulevard high-level bridge is partially submerged in water, and workers have placed gravel and sandbags on the Cootes Paradise side to hold off rising water levels.

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The NPCA adds that water levels are still 43 cm below the record-high levels set on May 25, 2017, which inflicted major damage along Hamilton’s shorelines.

WATCH: Residents along Lake Ontario’s shorelines on high alert due to rising waters (May 1)

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