Originally posted by shtferbrains
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BC floods.
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They could just go right at it. Its a climate emergency. No multi million dollar studies. No pork barrel engeneering contracts. The next rain is coming.
Trim it up later when it dries up.
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Originally posted by chuckChuck View PostIf you don't want to read it. No problem. I skip over most of the threads on this site and focus on the ones I am interested in. You can lead a horse to water but you can't make them drink.
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Originally posted by shtferbrains View PostThey could just go right at it. Its a climate emergency. No multi million dollar studies. No pork barrel engeneering contracts. The next rain is coming.
Trim it up later when it dries up.
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Originally posted by WiltonRanch View PostMy ancestors were teamsters who worked on canals in Ontario and later railroad beds in the west. Did it in the 1800’s with horses and fresnos. Think in this day and age with how pressing the issues are everyone would simply just get at it.
Duration: 02:46 16 hrs ago [Global News
Some of British Columbia's key roads remain closed after landslides and floods triggered by an extreme weather disaster. But one vital rail line has reopened, and another will soon follow. Mike Armstrong looks at their mountainous task still ahead for the truck industry, as the supply chain backlog builds up."
https://www.msn.com/en-ca/video/news/cp-rail-reopens-key-line-between-vancouver-and-kamloops-after-extreme-weather-disaster/vi-AAR3CJz?ocid=msedgntp
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Originally posted by TOM4CWB View Post"CP Rail reopens key line between Vancouver and Kamloops after extreme weather disaster
Duration: 02:46 16 hrs ago [Global News
Some of British Columbia's key roads remain closed after landslides and floods triggered by an extreme weather disaster. But one vital rail line has reopened, and another will soon follow. Mike Armstrong looks at their mountainous task still ahead for the truck industry, as the supply chain backlog builds up."
https://www.msn.com/en-ca/video/news/cp-rail-reopens-key-line-between-vancouver-and-kamloops-after-extreme-weather-disaster/vi-AAR3CJz?ocid=msedgntp
Folks should remember that the Kamloops to Vancouver tracks are directional traffic… with both CN and CP trains on the same line… operated for efficient one way trains of both CN and CP traffic movement for many years now.
CheersLast edited by TOM4CWB; Nov 24, 2021, 13:34.
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Originally posted by TOM4CWB View PostThe first CP trains arrived in Vancouver this morning, CN says their line will open this afternoon… according to Bloomberg.
Cheers
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Been watching the B.C. Ministry of Transportation photos of the clean up and fixing. I can’t say it looks like an exceptional job is being done. Particularly with the track at Tank Hill. If it rains again next week it looks like it’ll just wash right back out! They’ve moved a lot of dirt this week but I’m not sure that should be the only standard used.
Hopefully they’re just opening to try and get the backlog caught up a bit and then will have smaller sections shut down for more concrete repairs.
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We had a area along the railway where a creek runs into the river that has a realy deep gorge that has problems with washout.
They brought about 20 sidedump cars of what looked like rock blasted off the side of a mountain and dumped it into that washout.
They can move a lot of product and have the eqipment to do it quickly.
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Originally posted by shtferbrains View PostWe had a area along the railway where a creek runs into the river that has a realy deep gorge that has problems with washout.
They brought about 20 sidedump cars of what looked like rock blasted off the side of a mountain and dumped it into that washout.
They can move a lot of product and have the eqipment to do it quickly.
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Excellent article in the Financial Post: “Terence Corcoran: A human mistake-Why the B.C. floods are not a climate change issue.â€
Lots of interesting history, talks about how many different studies were done on what was needed to protect Sumas Praire and as an example how B.C. implemented a carbon tax in 2008 and none of it has been used for adaptation and flood mitigation. Governments would rather fight a climate boogeyman 80 years in the future than actually do something today!
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Originally posted by Hamloc View PostExcellent article in the Financial Post: “Terence Corcoran: A human mistake-Why the B.C. floods are not a climate change issue.â€
Lots of interesting history, talks about how many different studies were done on what was needed to protect Sumas Praire and as an example how B.C. implemented a carbon tax in 2008 and none of it has been used for adaptation and flood mitigation. Governments would rather fight a climate boogeyman 80 years in the future than actually do something today!
When the Oroville Dam spillway washed out… in California after the Atmosphere River filled that Dam to overflow…
They spent $1B to fix the spillways Double what the whole Oroville Dam 700’ high cost in the 1950’s.
Reconstructed dikes and modernization of the drainage systems in the Fraser Valley… which should have been being upgraded 20 years ago… is a multi Billion dollar plus project… If the Railways and Highway’s are hardened and upgraded to modern standards that would withstand another storm like happened 10 days ago in SW BC.
Better these upgrades be done when considering what we as Canadians have wasted 100$ of Billions over the past 2 years with no lasting benefits enduring in Capital capacity or assets.
Cheers
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