Anti-flood action vital, says RM

By 
Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: March 27, 1997

Farmers shouldn’t watch water swamp their land and then cry for compensation.

They should act before damage occurs and take responsibility for local drainage, Rural Municipality of Langenburg reeve Leo Fuhr told the Saskatchewan Conservation and Development Association annual convention last week.

“RMs can’t sit back and wait for big government to do it for them.”

Fuhr told SCDA delegates how his RM, facing floods brought on by blocked streams and creeks, decided to unilaterally clear the channels, even though a wildlife organization and a government department were opposed.

Read Also

Robert Andjelic, who owns 248,000 acres of cropland in Canada, stands in a massive field of canola south of Whitewood, Sask. Andjelic doesn't believe that technical analysis is a useful tool for predicting farmland values | Robert Arnason photo

Land crash warning rejected

A technical analyst believes that Saskatchewan land values could be due for a correction, but land owners and FCC say supply/demand fundamentals drive land prices – not mathematical models

He said his council wanted to clear streams running through land controlled by Ducks Unlimited, but the wetlands organization wouldn’t agree to the clearing.

So the RM invoked its “nuisance clause” to clear the channel and open the blockage, regardless of the group’s objections.

Fuhr said his RM is still fighting to get the government to pay its share of the channel clearing, but vowed to continue activist drainage operations whether the government funds it or not.

“We’re still going to do what has to be done to correct the system and protect the livelihoods of our farmers,” said Fuhr.

About the author

Ed White

Ed White

explore

Stories from our other publications