|
Drought to Shut Down
Canadian Rain Forest Resort
OTTAWA - A well-known resort town
in a Canadian Pacific rain forest must shutter its hotels and businesses
this week because a prolonged drought has slashed water supplies,
officials said on Wednesday.
Tofino, perched on the tip of
Vancouver Island on Canada's Pacific coast, is in a picturesque region
that is popular with surfers and whale watchers. It relies on rainwater to
fill its main reservoir, and officials ordered the shutdown because there
has been no significant rainfall since June.
"We just don't have the water to
offer them, that's all there is to it," Tofino mayor John Fraser told CBC
television, noting the town was experiencing its third driest year on
record and had ordered businesses to shut from Friday.
"We normally end up getting a good
rain sometime along the way (to) bail us out. But this year has just been
different ... the weather forecast for the next two weeks, even two months
is still continued dry without prospect of rain," said Fraser.
Local hotels, restaurant and
businesses complained that the closure would cause big losses, since it
comes at the start of the popular three-day Labor Day weekend.
One local businessman said Tofino
had regularly experienced problems with water supplies in previous years,
in part because of a boom in tourism.
"Water has been a major issue in
Tofino ... because of the fact that (in summer) 15,000 to 20,000 people
are in a town that normally holds 1,500," Laird Salton told CBC.
The town has switched to a
secondary supply and is advising residents to boil drinking water.
Fraser said Tofino planned to
increase the size of its reservoir to prevent similar problems next year.
Source: Reuters News Service 2006
Return to: Environmental News
Main Page
|