Understanding and Assessing Impacts
Starting in 2020, the City of Kelowna began the Mill Creek Flood Protection Project to improve the Mill Creek corridor and reduce flooding potential throughout the City. Mill Creek is 35-kilometer in length and winds through farmland and alongside industrial areas before looping its way through some downtown residential neighbourhoods and then emptying into Okanagan Lake. Land use activities in the Mill Creek watershed include agriculture and urban development in the lower watershed, and forestry in the middle and upper portions of the watershed. Extreme weather events like floods are getting worse and more frequent in Kelowna. In Spring 2017, flooding along Kelowna’s Mill Creek caused by an ill-timed rainstorm on top of a higher-than-normal spring freshet swamped many properties, causing some apartment buildings to be evacuated. This event marked flood mitigation work along Mill Creek as a high priority by City officials and led to the Mill Creek Flood Protection Project. This multi-year, multi-million dollar initiative to improve the creek corridor and reduce flooding potential throughout the City, from the Kelowna Airport to Okanagan Lake. With a funding contribution of $22 million through the Disaster Mitigation and Adaptation Fund (DMAF), the Mill Creek Flood Protection project will better protect residents and businesses of Kelowna from future flooding events, and economic loss due to extreme weather.