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Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Climate Crisis

Langille's Service Centre in Pugwash. Famous for service.Tory Rushton, Minister of Natural Resources and Renewables, MLA Cumberland SouthDr. Stephen Ellis, MP

This Week

Tuesday, May 14, 2024 9:45 AM

Listen to Stephen Ellis, Member of Parliament for Cumberland-Colchester, on Morning Talk every 2nd Tuesday at 9:40.
Tuesday, May 14, 2024 1:00 PM

Walk and Talk is held every Tuesday and Thursday at 1 pm at the Wentworth Recreation Centre.

Tuesday, May 14, 2024 1:00 PM

The Oxford Seniors Club (31 Ellis Street) will host a Coffee House from 1 to 3 pm every Tuesday. All Are Welcome.

Tuesday, May 14, 2024 6:00 PM

Women's Pickle Ball is played every Tuesday from 6 to 8 PM at the Wentworth Recreation Centre.

Wednesday, May 15, 2024 9:00 AM

Listen to Tory Rushton, Minister of Natural Resources and Renewables on Morning Talk each Wednesday at 9 am.
Wednesday, May 15, 2024 10:45 AM

Listen to Oxford Mayor Greg Henley on Morning Talk every Wednesday at 10:45.
Thursday, May 16, 2024 9:00 AM

Listen to Murray Scott, Mayor of Cumberland County, on Morning Talk every Thursday at 9:00.
Thursday, May 16, 2024 10:00 AM

Liberal Leader Zach Churchill, Leader of Nova Scotia's Official Opposition will be on Morning Talk on the third Thursday of every month. Listen at 10 am.

Saturday, May 18, 2024 8:00 PM

Listen to Saturday Night in a Harbour Town, traditional East Coast Music, with your host, Eric MacEwen, Saturdays at 8 pm.
Sunday, May 19, 2024 11:00 AM

Hope Centre Online offers a faith based message that challenges you to look at today's culture and issues in a new way. Every Sunday at 11am at www.hopecentre.ca, YouTube, or Facebook.

Sunday, May 19, 2024 1:00 PM

Listen to a replay of Saturday Night in a Harbour Town with host Eric MacEwen, every Sunday at 1 pm.
Sunday, May 19, 2024 3:00 PM

Listen to Let's Talk, a live, radio, talk show syndicated across the Maritimes on nine radio stations, hosted at Hope Centre in Pugwash, NS. Listen every Sunday at 3 pm on Inspire FM or sixrivers.ca or hopecentre.ca.

Monday, May 20, 2024 9:45 AM

Listen to Tim Houston, Premier of Nova Scotia, on Morning Talk on the 3rd Monday of each month at 9:45. Click HERE for our online player. Click HERE for our direct player.
Monday, May 20, 2024 8:00 PM

Pickleball and Basketball played every Monday from 8 to 9 pm at the OREC gym in Oxford. Click HERE for details.

Top Stories

When Water Comes A-Knockin’
By Zack Metcalfe, Climate Story Network
/ Categories: News, Climate

When Water Comes A-Knockin’

Clean Foundation pilots Flood Retrofit Program in two municipalities.

More floods are coming to Nova Scotia, and not just from storm surges on the waterfront. Overland flooding, from rivers or lakes bursting their banks, or from torrents of rainwater colliding with homes on their way downhill, are already becoming more frequent. 

Nova Scotia’s 2022 climate change risk assessment – Weathering What’s Ahead – identified flooding as the most likely detriment to provincial wellbeing in the 2030s.

“With some of the big rainfall events from last summer, we saw all types of flooding,” says Charlynne Robertson, a senior manager of programs with Clean Foundation. “So many people were being flooded and dealing with the aftermath.”

Damage can look very different depending on the home, she says — finished versus unfinished basements for example — but according to the Intact Centre on Climate Adaptation, the average cost of remediating basement flood damage in Canada is $43,000. 

What’s more, says Robertson, most home insurance policies don’t automatically cover overland flood damage, a fact many homeowners often learn too late.

Clean Foundation is a not-for-profit environmental charity that began in 1988 delivering programs throughout Nova Scotia — everything from energy efficiency assessments to in-school awareness, to municipal climate adaptation. 

The necessity for homeowners, and for municipalities at large, to prepare themselves for overland flooding has been top of mind at Clean for some time. In fact, many of their energy assessors, visiting homes to recommend heat pumps and draft-proofing, have also been recommending overland flood prevention retrofits, if for no other reason than they’ll keep that shiny new heat pump in the basement dry.

Robertson and her colleagues decided to go a step further, embarking on a retrofit program specific to overland flood prevention. 

The Resilient Home Retrofit Pilot Project was launched in 2023, in which 20 households in vulnerable watersheds — 10 from New Glasgow and 10 from the Halifax Regional Municipality (specifically Upper Hammonds Plains and Spryfield) — are receiving flood risk assessments and preventative retrofits for free. 

Assessments were completed in early February, and retrofits are expected to wrap up by December. This is only a pilot project, Robertson stressed, and cannot yet expand beyond the 20 households already involved.

“It’s been an emotional time when it comes to flooding,”  Robertson says. “People all over Nova Scotia want help and answers. We’re just trying to figure out how a program like this can work, and how we can learn from it, so we can explore what to do next.”

While they haven’t yet ruled anything out, retrofits will probably focus on solar pumps (installed on low ground, in basements, to immediately dispose of inundating water), improved eave troughs with downward spouts at least two metres away from the home’s foundation, and the installation of basement windowsills. 

They might also get into landscaping: altering the grade of surrounding lawns to shuttle water away from the home, and installing French drains to do the same. And based on Clean’s expertise with nature-based solutions, said Robertson, another suggestion might be the installation of “rain gardens” filled with water-hungry plants able to soak up excess precipitation.

“We should be encouraging nature to step in and help where possible,” she says.

Homeowners are also receiving an education in flood preparedness, which includes the following recommendations: pack a 72-hour emergency kit; check on neighbours after a flooding event; keep your gutters and storm drains clean; make sure household pipes and weeping tiles are working properly; keep electrical wiring off the basement floor; keep downstairs valuables in plastic totes, etc.

“Resilience to me isn’t just making sure the home is better protected from floods,” Robertson says. “It’s also about making sure the homeowner’s better prepared.”

And this message of personal preparedness is not restricted to participating households, says Robertson. As part of the Resilient Home Retrofit Pilot Project, Clean Foundation is attending home shows, encouraging homeowners in vulnerable watersheds to make their own plans and investments, and to be very aware of what their insurance policies do and don’t cover.

“We all know flooding is a risk,” Robertson says. “We’ll be having more and larger precipitation events in the future. It’s important to plan ahead, at both the municipal and household level.”

The main photo shows a water swale, noted in gravel, to move water away from the house. Below, Jesse Galati performs a flood risk assessment which includes looking at features both inside and outside the home to identify potential risks to flooding. Photos courtesy of Clean Foundation.

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