Dikes, ditches and dams: Manitoba’s fight against flooding is complex
WINNIPEG — It has become an annual ritual in Manitoba — mid-winter thoughts turn to the spring melt and whether land and communities will be threatened by rising water that comes from rivers as far away as the Rocky Mountains and South Dakota.
The water comes through every year on its way to Lake Winnipeg and Hudson Bay. Often it stays within riverbanks. But sometimes it combines with heavy precipitation and other factors to spill over, force evacuations and threaten damage in the millions of dollars.
Over the last six decades, Manitoba has developed a complex network of dikes, dams and ditches to keep water flowing to its destination without harming Winnipeg, Brandon and many other communities.
“If there was an institute for floods — a Noah Institute — it would have to be located in Winnipeg because we have spent all our history, nearly, dealing with the flooding problem,” Paul Thomas, professor emeritus of political studies at the University of Manitoba, said in a recent interview.