This new mapping tool helped Ottawa handle the 2019 floods - Action News
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Ottawa

This new mapping tool helped Ottawa handle the 2019 floods

City of Ottawa officials had a new tool at their disposal during this spring's flooding: a mapping program that showed the danger each additional centimetre of water could pose to buildings and infrastructure.

City now working to make version of $160K tool available for the public

Laila Gibbons, Ottawa's director of roads and parking services, says the city's new flood mapping tool allowed officialsto see how increasing water levels would affect neighbourhoods days in advance. (Matthew Kupfer/CBC)

City of Ottawa officials had a new tool at their disposal during this spring's flooding: a mapping program that showed the danger each additional centimetre of water could pose to buildings and infrastructure.

Laila Gibbons, director of roads and parking services, said the predictive mapping tool contributed to the decision to declare a state of emergencyafterthe Ottawa River Regulation and Planning Board released its forecast in late April.

"When we put [the forecast]into our mapping program to see what that was going to look like,there are some areas across the city that were actually going to see [damage] beyond the one-in-100-year or the one-percent storm," Gibbons said.

"That was a significant change to what we were seeing just two or three days before that."

This map of Cumberland was generated using the city's mapping tool. Red marks show infrastructure that would be flooded with more than 30 centimetres of flood water. Yellow marks indicate areas affected by less than 30 centimetres. (Matthew Kupfer/CBC )

Cost $160K

The mapping tool allows city staff to input different water levels and see how roads, city infrastructure and private property will be affected, Gibbons said.

It was developed over the last year and cost just under $160,000.

The program usestopgraphic LIDAR or light detection and ranging maps from 2015, which helped the city detect weak spots and direct homeowners, volunteers and the military where to best place sandbags.

The map shows the impact of the 2019 flood on Bayview Drive in Constance Bay. (Matthew Kupfer/CBC)

"In 2017, we made some assumptions about where water was accessing the properties," Gibbons said.

"This time around, we were able to actually identify the real areas [where]the water was overflowing the banks and then inundating roads and properties."

Tool to go public

One of the shortcomings of the program, however, was that the 2015 data didn't take into account the protective work residents performed before, during and after the 2017 floods like newlyraised houses, for instance, or the recently-built Britannia berm.

Gibbons said the map will also have to be updated to include groundwater, which affects infrastructure further inland.

The city is working on developing a publicly accessibleversion of the mapping tool, Gibbons added,so people can check on their own properties.

A spokesperson for the City of Gatineau says the municipality is working with other local governments on improved mapping and communications technology for areas affected by flooding in the region.

The Quebec government announced in March 2018 it would put$2.8 million toward the development of those projects.