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Rain swells north, central B.C. rivers but southeast levels to fall as heat arrives

VANCOUVER — The River Forecast Centre says rising levels of some waterways in southeastern British Columbia could ease as runoff from heavy rain decreases, but downpours continue to swell rivers in north and central parts of the province.
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A home on the Nicola River that was affected by flooding in November, sits on mud covered farmland west of Merritt, B.C., on Wednesday, March 23, 2022. The River Forecast Centre says rising levels in some waterways of British Columbia's southeastern Interior could ease as runoff from recent heavy rains decreases, but downpours continue to swell rivers and streams in north and central parts of the province. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

VANCOUVER — The River Forecast Centre says rising levels of some waterways in southeastern British Columbia could ease as runoff from heavy rain decreases, but downpours continue to swell rivers in north and central parts of the province.

The centre issued a flood watch late Wednesday for the Illecillewaet River and its tributaries around Revelstoke as up to 40 millimetres of rain drenched the region.

Downpours also prompted flood warnings for the Blue and Quesnel river systems east of Williams Lake and a high streamflow advisory is now in place for the Upper Fraser River and its tributaries from Prince George to Valemount.

Flood warnings, watches or high streamflow advisories cover the eastern half of B.C., from the Yukon boundary to the United States border, as well as the Fraser River from Quesnel to the ocean.

As unsettled weather moves out, the centre anticipates rapid melting of remaining snowpacks as the first heat wave of the year brings several days of temperatures in the low to mid-30s to all but coastal regions of the province.

Forecasters say there is "uncertainty" about the extent that snowpack runoff will raise water levels over the coming days but caution the public to stay away from fast-flowing rivers and potentially unstable riverbanks.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 23, 2022

The Canadian Press