‘There’s just lots of devastation’ Manitoba asks Ottawa for military help in ‘gargantuan’ cleanup to come in flooded Parkland region

Evacuee Sevanna Delaronde was in disbelief after she and her partner returned to their flooded neighbourhood in Swan River to check on their home Thursday morning.

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Evacuee Sevanna Delaronde was in disbelief after she and her partner returned to their flooded neighbourhood in Swan River to check on their home Thursday morning.

She estimated their basement was under more than a metre of water from the Swan River, which overflowed following heavy rains and forced the mandatory evacuation of several streets Wednesday afternoon.

“The water breached the windows in the night and the river is still surrounding our place,” an emotional Delaronde said.

Sevanna Delaronde’s flooded home on Crescent Drive in Swan River. (Supplied)

Sevanna Delaronde’s flooded home on Crescent Drive in Swan River. (Supplied)

“There’s just lots of devastation. I know a lot of people have lost more than me. They had no time to get out because it came too fast.”

Water levels appeared to be receding Thursday, she said.

Mayor Lance Jacobson said up to 200 homes flooded within the town, along with some in the surrounding municipality, Swan Valley West.

“We have to go each day at a time and do our planning, and see how we can start getting people back in here to start cleaning it up,” he said. “As far as this happening before — never. This is truly unprecedented.”

There was no timeline for the return of evacuees. Some businesses also flooded.

Swan Valley West Reeve Bill Gade said this round of flooding is “a lot worse” than the flooding about three weeks ago.

“It’s wider spread, the water was higher, the areas flooded the first time were a little higher this time,” Gade said. “Instead of just the one river flooding, we had the secondary river flood as well, which has caused most of that destruction in the town,” he added. “Things are not good here.”

Flooding was widespread in the Parkland region, including Dauphin. Swan River and Minitonas were among the places hit for the second time in less than a month.

Kinew surveys flooding during a flight from Dauphin to Swan River on Thursday. (Mike Deal / Free Press)
Kinew surveys flooding during a flight from Dauphin to Swan River on Thursday. (Mike Deal / Free Press)

Environment and Climate Change Canada meteorologist Terri Lang said Swan River has received 106.8 millimetres of rain since June 28, and a combined 269.5 mm for all of June. That compares to an average of 84.8 mm it typically receives over that month.

“This is the wettest June since 1976,” she said about Swan River.

Meanwhile, Dauphin received 118.9 mm of rain since June 28 and a combined 211.3 mm for the entire month. The average for Dauphin is 80.7 mm. That makes this June the third wettest on record, behind 1944 and 1953, she said.

Many highways and gravel roads washed out or were deliberately cut to allow floodwater to flow through, isolating some communities.

After being cut off from emergency services, Minegoziibe Anishinabe, also known as Pine Creek First Nation, was one of the latest communities to declare a state of local emergency.

Premier Wab Kinew said the province has asked the federal government for the military’s help in communities such as Swan River, where flood-fighting efforts were “active” and a “gargantuan” cleanup will be necessary.

“Right now, the biggest need is to make sure they get the resources, the supplies, the pumps, the sandbags to be able to stabilize the situation,” he told reporters as he toured flood-affected areas, including from the air.

Kinew (left) and Dauphin Mayor David Bosiak walk together outside Dauphin City Hall while the premier toured the flood damage in the city on Thursday.  (Tim Smith / The Brandon Sun)
Kinew (left) and Dauphin Mayor David Bosiak walk together outside Dauphin City Hall while the premier toured the flood damage in the city on Thursday. (Tim Smith / The Brandon Sun)

Kinew said he made the request to federal Emergency Management Minister Eleanor Olszewski, and that a response would be likely “in the next day or two.”

“If the federal government can bring in some of their resources, it just helps to ease the burden on those who’ve already been shouldering it,” Kinew said.

Conservative MP Dan Mazier, whose Riding Mountain constituency includes flood-hit areas in Parkland, also requested federal support, including military assistance.

“Just to get the military support, even the air support, to get supplies in so they can start rebuilding and getting infrastructure rebuilt, I think the federal government needs to step up,” he said.

In a statement, Olszewski acknowledged the request for assistance, but didn’t say what kind of help will come from Ottawa.

“We are working with the province to assess evolving local needs so together we can determine the best ways to support the flood response on the ground to ensure Manitobans get the help they need,” she said.

Late Thursday, after the premier finished the tour, he said Ottawa must help fund the flood response and cleanup.

“There’s a lot of back and forth going on,” Kinew said about conversations with federal officials.

MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS
                                Kinew (left) helps a load a generator onto a canoe so it can be taken to a home only accessible by flooded streets in Swan River.

MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS

Kinew (left) helps a load a generator onto a canoe so it can be taken to a home only accessible by flooded streets in Swan River.

“I can tell you, just having gotten back from Swan River … people are frustrated. There’s a lot of emotion,” Kinew told reporters at the St. Andrews Airport north of Winnipeg.

“The idea is to get some more boots on the ground,” he said. “You’ve got homeowners who are stressed out, they’ve been pulling all-nighters. You’ve got frontline service people, first responders … so people have been going hard day after day.”

When asked if he thinks the federal government understands the extent of the damage, he replied: “I don’t think anyone could understand and that’s why I’m reaching out to everyone I can at the federal level to get this assistance for people in rural Manitoba. Listen, Minitonas had a one-in-10,000-year flood event — which means it should happen about as often as an ice age — they’ve had two of those in less than a month.”

Kinew said the provincial disaster financial assistance stage will look at rebuilding infrastructure, including roads and water and wastewater systems, to make it more resilient.

“It’s not just about building back the same thing we had before. Now that we’ve seen what can happen with the changing climate, we need to build infrastructure that is going to meet that need,” he said.

The province is providing $5 million in disaster financial assistance to help municipalities rebuild roads and otherwise respond to flooding.

Services were disrupted at Dauphin Regional Health Centre after water filled its basement and power was cut. More than 50 patients were moved to other hospitals. The emergency department is closed until further notice.

MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS
                                Seventh Avenue North in Swan River is completely flooded.

MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS

Seventh Avenue North in Swan River is completely flooded.

Agriculture Minister Ron Kostyshyn, the MLA for Dauphin, said farms are being assessed after historic flooding.

“Our first line of defence is crop insurance,” he said, noting the AgriStability program exists for producers who suffer financial losses.

In Swan River, Delaronde, her partner and two of their children are staying with friends after they and their neighbours were forced to abandon sandbagging efforts and leave their homes on Crescent Drive Wednesday while the river continued to rise.

Residents scrambled to salvage precious belongings and move items to higher ground as water filled their basements.

“It was coming out of the shower, it was coming out of the toilet,” Delaronde said. “We just focused on getting what we could out of our basement and saving as much as we could.”

She said the couple’s home insurance policy doesn’t have flood coverage. A rental home owned by the couple in Minitonas flooded in early June.

Crescent Drive evacuee Kurt Rewerts said family and friends helped to sandbag his family’s home at about 1:30 a.m. Wednesday.

“By 5 a.m., the water was (up) to the sandbags and coming around from the front of the house. From there, it was all downhill,” he said. His basement was full of water and his house was surrounded by the river Thursday.

MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS
                                The overflowing Swan River has closed off areas in the town of Swan River.

MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS

The overflowing Swan River has closed off areas in the town of Swan River.

“Obviously, we’re devastated,” said Rewerts, who is staying with relatives, along with his wife and their two children. “The fight right now is to try to get roads opened up so we can get resources here to help.”

The “silver lining,” he said, is how residents rallied to build sandbag dikes, deliver and run water pumps or provide food to those trying to protect homes. A donation centre for essentials was overwhelmed.

“It’s just incredible how this town has come together,” Rewerts said. “There were people everywhere helping — friends, family and people they didn’t know. It’s times like this you definitely see the best in humanity, and I’m very proud to be part of this community.”

Swan River is home to about 4,000 people. Rewerts and Delaronde said the most important thing is everyone’s safety — belongings can be replaced and homes can be rebuilt.

“There is going to be lots to clean up, and I do hope the help is there when that happens,” Delaronde said. “It’s not just Swan River. There are many areas that are needing services and supports.”

Winnipeg resident Jerrod Cox and his two children were stranded at their family’s cottage at Wellman Lake in Duck Mountain Provincial Park after roads were washed out.

Cox said they were hoping to leave via a highway where provincial staff were filling gaps.

MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS
                                Water covers farmland between Dauphin and Swan River.

MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS

Water covers farmland between Dauphin and Swan River.

“We’re going to try to zig-zag our way up to Minitonas and then up to Swan River, and then zig-zag our way through Saskatchewan and try to go home,” he said. “Fingers crossed.”

The drive from Duck Mountain to Winnipeg normally takes about five hours. Cox expected the detour to take a few hours longer.

He said he was “a little stressed out” while stranded, but he and his children were fortunate to be in a cabin.

Dauphin Mayor David Bosiak said the city of more than 8,000 people is in “cleanup mode” after floodwater from the Vermillion River had receded. He estimated hundreds of homes were damaged by overland flooding or sewer backups.

When the Vermillion River floods in the spring, it usually fills a park of the same name, Bosiak said.

“This time around, with the amount of water that was coming and the rain that had fallen in the Riding Mountain area and to the west of us, it came hard and fast, and it hit with a vengeance during the night,” he said.

Municipalities have not yet been able to do a full assessment of damage to roads, bridges and other infrastructure.

The Rural Municipality of Dauphin probably has about 400 washed-out sections of roads, Reeve Ernie Sirski said.

A section of highway north of Pine River, washed away from floodwaters. (Government of Manitoba)

A section of highway north of Pine River, washed away from floodwaters. (Government of Manitoba)

“We’ve got people who are landlocked, people who can’t get out of their houses right now,” he said.

The Canadian Red Cross is providing accommodations, food and other supports to evacuees from the Dauphin area, Red Deer Lake, Swan River and Tootinaowaziibeeng Treaty Reserve, spokeswoman Shelly Makrugin said.

— with files from Mike Deal, Nicole Buffie, Morgan Modjeski, Brandon Sun

chris.kitching@freepress.mb.ca

Chris Kitching

Chris Kitching
Reporter

Chris Kitching is a general assignment reporter at the Free Press. He began his newspaper career in 2001, with stops in Winnipeg, Toronto and London, England, along the way. After returning to Winnipeg, he joined the Free Press in 2021, and now covers a little bit of everything for the newspaper. Read more about Chris.

Every piece of reporting Chris produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press‘s tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press’s history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.

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History

Updated on Thursday, July 2, 2026 5:48 PM CDT: Adds more comment from premier, affected residents

Updated on Thursday, July 2, 2026 7:00 PM CDT: Adds update from Canadian Red Cross

Updated on Thursday, July 2, 2026 7:50 PM CDT: Adds more comments, details

Updated on Thursday, July 2, 2026 10:16 PM CDT: Photos changed.

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