Calgary

High River flood-mitigation berm irks some adjacent homeowners

Some High River residents are upset about losing their view because of a three-metre high flood-mitigation berm.

3-metre high ridge of raised earth blocking backyard view of some properties

High River flood berm irks some residents

10 years ago
Duration 2:02
Not everyone is happy about some flood mitigation work in the town south of Calgary.

Some High River residents are upset about losing their view because of a three-metre high flood-mitigation berm.

​Nineteen residents sent a letter to council saying the seven-kilometre stretch of raised earth — one of two berms being constructed on the north and south sides of the Highwood  River — has lowered their property values.

Berms being constructed in High River on the north and south side of the Highwood River have some residents complaining their property values will go down. (CBC)

"We have a neighbour two doors down, he paid over $400,000 for his a year ago, got a big sundeck on the back, and he's been trying to sell it,” said area resident Ron LeBlanc.

“He's had two people come look at it. They look out the back window and said no thanks, not with that berm."

But High River Mayor Craig Snodgrass said town council and most residents strongly support the berms.

“There’s things that need to be done, when you make these decisions, yes it’s for the good of the whole community, but I’m not naïve to think that it doesn’t affect people differently personally,” he said.

High River Mayor Craig Snodgrass says new berms to protect the town from future flooding are necessary, despite complaints from some residents. (CBC)

“But you always have to look at things, what’s the best for High River.”

High River resident Ginger Noel agreed. “I think the berm is a safety measure for the rest of the town,” she said.

“So, I live in another part of town, so I’m grateful for the berm because I think it’s going to protect where I live next time, and the rest of the town. I think losing a view is a small price to pay to not go through what we did.”

Devastating floods last summer left hundreds of people in High River homeless and cost millions of dollars in property damage.

Snodgrass has brought the issue up at council and drafted a letter in response to the complaining residents. But he said it’s hard to see their point of view.

"I'll show you what a loss of home value is — cut a notch in that thing for your view, your home value is nada,” he said.