B.C. budget includes $2.1B in disaster relief; $5.5B deficit for next fiscal year
VICTORIA — British Columbia has earmarked $2.1 billion to fund disaster recovery efforts and future response to the threats posed by wildfires, floods and heat waves in a budget that forecasts a $5.5-billion deficit.
Finance Minister Selina Robinson said Tuesday a three-year climate fund will support ongoing disaster cleanup and rebuilding in southern B.C. communities hit by last November’s floods and mudslides.
The budget does not include a total estimate of the recovery costs, prompting the government to add a $1.1-billion contingency fund in its financial accounting for the 2022-23 fiscal year to cover future costs.
“While we have all experienced the realities of climate change this year, I can’t help but think of Indigenous people in the Nicola Valley, farmers in Abbotsford and the residents of Merritt, Princeton and Lytton,” said Robinson, referring to communities damaged by flooding or wildfires last year.


