lynda hoffman says the city’s response to last week’s flooding has fallen short.
dave sidaway
/
montreal gazette
“there is absolutely something wrong (with the infrastructure),” said franca bucaro, a st-léonard resident who
has suffered several floods in recent years. “i know it’s a lot of rain, i understand climate change is real. but, meanwhile, what do we do?”
bucaro, who has also taken steps to protect her home, saw about an inch of water spread across her basement last week.
half her street was closed because the amount of water made it impossible to cross. dump trucks have been on site picking up people’s soaked belongings ever since, including appliances and furniture.
“neighbours that never, ever got flooded are getting flooded now,” bucaro said, adding many feel abandoned by the city. “there were municipal employees, but no representatives. no one at all.”
“there is absolutely something wrong” with the city’s infrastructure, says franca bucaro, seen in march 2023. the st-léonard resident has suffered several floods in recent years.
pierre obendrauf
/
montreal gazette files
n.d.g. resident ilana grostern, who like hoffman is part of an
ongoing class action lawsuit over last year’s floods, expressed similar frustrations and said residents are tired of the city putting the blame on them.
“the (borough) hosted a meeting at the end of october where they swore left, right and centre that if everybody installed backflow valves, they wouldn’t get flooded again, so we did that in good faith,” grostern said.