Wednesday, September 13, 2023

Disasters getting worse, say Brazil cyclone victims

Muçum (Brazil) (AFP) – In his 74 years, Humberto Simonaio had never experienced anything like it: the cyclone that hit southern Brazil swelled the Taquari river so badly it inundated even high ground he had never seen flood before.

Residents of the town of Mucum, in southern Brazil, remove belongings from a house damaged by a deadly cyclone © Silvio AVILA / AFP

Simonaio, the owner of a beloved, half-century-old ice cream parlor called Keko in the hard-hit town of Mucum, said he knew he needed to get his freezers and other equipment to higher ground as last week's storm headed toward the southern state of Rio Grande do Sul, packing torrential rains.

But he never imagined the local river would become such a torrent it would also overrun the supposedly safe spot he took them to, a friend's shed in one of the highest parts of the city, he said.

"Since the day I was born, I'd never had to evacuate because of a flood," said Simonaio, who had a machine swept several meters (yards) away by the current but plans to reopen soon.

"I don't know why these storms have gotten so big. This was the biggest in our history," he told AFP.

Mucum, population 4,600, is hardly alone: experts say extreme weather events are growing more common around the world, hitting places like Hong Kong, Greece and Libya this month alone, as climate change fuels bigger, deadlier disasters and governments struggle to adapt.

A week after the storm hit Mucum, the town is still cleaning the mud and wreckage from its streets and mourning its dead.

Sixteen of the nearly 50 people killed in the cyclone were found here. Dozens of others are still missing across the region.

"Human lives are being seriously affected by the excessive warming of the atmosphere, which is resulting in extreme weather events in various parts of the world," said Dakir Larara Machado da Silva, a climate scientist at Rio Grande do Sul Federal University.

"Record heat waves, prolonged droughts, a month's worth of rain in 24 hours -- it's a ticking time bomb," added the professor, who got a first-hand view of the destruction when the storm hit his state.

"Areas that didn't used to be affected (by floods) are starting to now."

'Here to stay'


In a neighborhood of Mucum called Fatima, the one hit hardest by the storm, 56-year-old teacher Ana Luisa Batiuci says she used to feel relatively safe: the house where she lives with her husband and daughter sits on a hilltop.

But they got more than a meter (three feet) of water inside.

"It had never risen so high," she told AFP, cleaning up the mud.

Selmar Klunk, 38, the director of a regional tourism association, was helping neighbors in the nearby town of Encantado save their belongings as the floodwaters rose.

After working through the night, he learned the flood had reached the parking lot where he left his car, two kilometers (more than a mile) from the river.

Machado da Silva called the disaster an "exceptional climate event" that "defies preventive measures" -- and will probably be repeated.

"It's the start of something that's here to stay," he said.

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva also linked the tragedy to the warming climate.

The planet is experiencing "an unprecedented climate emergency," he said from the G20 summit in New Delhi.



Issued on: 13/09/2023 
© 2023 AFP

As climate catastrophes rise, reinsurers reduce risks

Monaco (AFP) – Natural disasters are now happening so frequently that reinsurers -- the firms that sell insurance to insurance companies -- are scaling back their exposure to such risks.
Natural disasters such as the wildfires that scorched Hawaii have become more frequent © Patrick T. Fallon / AFP/File

While this may make business sense, it raises the question of whether individuals and businesses will be able to protect themselves against the effects of climate change if their insurance companies cannot even get coverage themselves.

Just weeks after wildfires caused major damage in Hawaii and parts of Europe, and as catastrophic floods ravaged Libya, the issue was front and centre at a major industry gathering held in Monaco this week.

Reinsurers identified climate change as the biggest risk they now face in a survey by PricewaterhouseCoopers and the Centre for the Study of Financial Innovation.

"Climate change is the number-one risk once again as reinsurers bear the brunt of the cost of catastrophe claims from an ever-increasing number of extreme weather events," the report said.

"As these losses spiral upwards, the survey highlights growing concerns that some areas and types of business could become uninsurable," it added.

Ratings agency Fitch said in a note to investors ahead of the conference, which ends Wednesday, that some companies "were already retreating from the property-casualty market in 2022".

It added that "even the strongest reinsurers have now pulled back, largely through tightening their terms and conditions to limit their aggregate covers and low layers of natural catastrophe protection".

Another ratings agency, S&P, said "more than half of the top 20 global reinsurers maintained or reduced their natural catastrophe exposures during the January 2023 renewals, despite the improved pricing terms and conditions and rising demand".

The reinsurance unit of insurance giant AXA raised prices 6.3 percent during the first half of this year, but it took in three percent less, mostly because of a reduction in exposure to natural catastrophes.

According to Fitch, reinsurers are reducing their exposure to so-called secondary peril events. These are smaller weather events, which are becoming more frequent and virulent owing to climate change.

'Doesn't make any sense'

Reinsurers are still offering ample cover against the most severe weather events, Fitch added.

Data released by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) found that weather and climate disasters in the United States where losses exceeded $1 billion averaged 18 per year between 2018 and 2022, up from 8.1 events between 1980 and 2022, using inflation-adjusted figures.

The United States was hit by a record-breaking 23 such events in the first eight months of this year, it added.

This rising number of natural disasters has put pressure on reinsurers.

"There was an under-estimation of the frequency of events, and I think we underestimated the development of the population in different areas as well," said Jean-Paul Conoscente, chief executive of the property and casualty branch of reinsurer Scor.

Scor began to reduce its exposure to natural catastrophes in 2021.

Fitch analyst Robert Mazzuoli noted that policies that paid out to insurers once a certain amount of damages from a particular risk, like hail, was reached, have completely disappeared when they were very popular only two or three years ago.

Providing coverage against risks with "really high frequency... doesn't make any sense", said Thomas Blunck, who heads up the reinsurance committee at the world's top reinsurer, Munich Re.

These natural disaster policies were initially developed to protect insurers from extreme events and not against the volatility inherent in the business, said Conoscente, explaining the development in the industry.

'Brutal' shift

But this repositioning of reinsurers is not without consequence for traditional insurers.

"This is part of the reasons which has driven us to have a rather negative outlook," said Manuel Arrive, a Paris-based director at Fitch Ratings.

Jean-Philippe Dogneton, head of the French insurer Macif, criticised the "rapid" and "brutal" shift in the reinsurance sector.

Fitch's Robert Mazzuoli said some reinsurers "were abrupt with their clients and treated them poorly".

Given the current circumstances, insurers may have little choice than increase their rates or in turn reduce the risks that they cover, which is already happening in certain countries.

Scor's Conoscente said for the moment "you can get insurance anywhere" but on the condition of being able to "pay the necessary price".

For him, the real problem is that "a large portion of the population isn't ready to pay the real cost" of climate change.

 13/09/2023 

© 2023 AFP

Tuesday, September 12, 2023

Australia logging ban to create koala haven

Agence France-Presse
September 12, 2023,

Koala numbers are threatened by deforestation, drought and bushfires 
(William WEST/AFP)

Australia's most populous state announced Tuesday a logging ban in a forest haven for koalas, aiming to protect the local population from being wiped out.

Logging has been halted in 8,400 hectares (21,000 acres) of forest, home to 106 "koala hubs" that are highly populated by the marsupials, the New South Wales government said.

The koala-rich area would form a key part of a planned 315,000-hectare Great Koala National Park on the mid-north coast and "save koalas from extinction in the state", it said.

The move was a "historic step forward", said Nature Conservation Council acting chief executive Brad Smith, describing the area as "the most important koala habitat in the world".

"This decision is also a recognition that logging has a devastating impact on koalas and biodiversity," he added.

WWF-Australia spokesman Dr Stuart Blanch said koala numbers in NSW had suffered a dramatic decline, falling by more than 50 percent between 2000 and 2020 due to deforestation, drought and bushfires.

The government's move "is a chance to turn this tragedy around", he said.

"If we're going to save koalas from extinction this century, then we need massive new protected areas covering millions of hectares of forests."

But Greens spokesperson for the environment Sue Higginson criticized the move as "a gift to the timber industry".

She said 58 percent of the proposed park area's koala population would be left unprotected by the logging ban, adding: "Logging is likely to continue throughout the area of the Great Koala National Park through to 2025 due to the long reporting timeline that the government has set for itself.

"The government needs to do the work now to begin the transition of the public native forest industry before it's too late for koalas and too late for the other previous forest-dependent species."

The state government said it would soon begin consultations with state-owned logging agency Forestry Corporation NSW to "determine timber supply options".
California firefighters use AI to battle wildfires

Agence France-Presse
September 12, 2023,

FILE PHOTO: Firefighters battle a fast-moving wildfire that destroyed homes driven by strong wind and high temperatures forcing thousands of residents to evacuate in Goleta, California, U.S., early July 7, 2018. REUTERS/Gene Blevins


When a wildfire erupted in the middle of a recent California night, it could have been a disaster.

But thanks to a new monitoring system that uses artificial intelligence to scan for danger, firefighters were able to quell the blaze long before it got out of hand.

"It was less than a quarter acre," Captain Kris Yeary of Cal Fire told AFP.

"Had the AI not alerted us to it, it could have gotten much bigger."

Yeary, who is responsible for organizing firefighting over an area that includes Mount Laguna, around 40 miles (65 kilometers) east of San Diego, sprang into action around 3am on August 5 after a call from colleagues at a command center.

Computers watching live feeds from the Cleveland National Forest spotted what their algorithm had been taught to understand was a column of smoke.

Human operators were able to verify the machines were correct and alerted Yeary, whose firefighters quickly extinguished the flames.

"It could have been a devastating fire," he said.

- Artificial intelligence -

Artificial intelligence is a rapidly developing field of computing that seeks to mimic human abilities to "think."

Unlike a traditional computer, which can only produce answers based on the concrete information it has, AI can infer answers, using experience it has gained from similar problems it has seen before -- similar to a human being.

Over the last few years, its application has spread to include areas as diverse as weather forecasting, stock-picking, art and journalism.

That has brought with it worries from people who fear it will do them out of their jobs -- the writers' and actors' strike currently paralyzing Hollywood is in part about the use of AI in films and television.


But firefighters battling California's wildfires say they will take all the help they can get.

"AI is just another tool for us," said Yeary. "It's never going to replace firefighters."



- Promising results -


California experiences thousands of fires every year, which torch hundreds of thousands -- sometimes millions -- of acres (hectares).

Over the last decade, blazes have claimed more than 200 lives, and destroyed thousands of homes and businesses, wreaking billions of dollars of damage.

For several years firefighters have used a network of more than 1,000 cameras to monitor possible fire hotspots.

Since the end of June, the ALERTCalifornia system has had AI computers "watching" these feeds, and flagging to human operators when they see wisps of smoke that could be a fire -- with promising results.

"Our success metric is the fires you never hear about," says Neal Driscoll, who heads the project for the University of California San Diego.

"We beat 911 calls about 40 percent of the time. And it's going to get better."

The addition of AI has meant each firefighter watching the dozens of feeds they are responsible for now has a helping hand.

When the software believes it detects smoke, it displays a small red rectangle on the screen, and offers a percentage indicating its degree of certainty.

It is then up to the operator to confirm the seriousness of the alert -- and weed out any confusion.

Currently, the system can erroneously flag dust raised by tractors, insects in front of the camera or even a bit of fog.

"When a cloud will go over... it can cast a shadow on the ground and sometimes (the computer) can actually think that that's possibly smoke," says Suzann Leininger, an intelligence specialist at Cal Fire.

The feedback that experts like Leininger give -- no, that's just a bit of weather -- is helping the AI to get better at what it does.

But even in its current state, it's a boon.

"It's getting us time to react in a faster manner," says Leininger.

And when you're talking about fire, time can be everything.


- Climate change -


As California grapples with the effects of human-caused climate change, fires are becoming bigger and more destructive.

The state has experienced 18 of its 20 largest wildfires on record in the last two decades.

With terrifying blazes ripping through Europe, Canada and Hawaii this year, the devastating impact of the changing climate is becoming ever-more apparent worldwide.

"I think that as we see these devastations in other areas, like in Greece, and Maui, that systems like this that provide early confirmation will be a step in the right direction," says Driscoll of UC San Diego.

Faced with the scale of the threat, the scientist has chosen to grant public access to the data on his platform, so that other companies or academics can work on it.

"We need to leverage all of our assets and work together, because extreme climate is bigger than any one of us."

GERIATRICOGRACY 
Dementia risk among aging politicians poses national security risk: Pentagon study

Sky Palma
September 12, 2023

(Photo by Saul Loeb for AFP)

A Pentagon-funded think tank released a report that says the potential for dementia among aging politicians is a national security risk, The Intercept reported.

The report comes as bipartisan concerns increase around the advanced age of politicians such as GOP Sen. Mitch McConnell and Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein – and even President Joe Biden and potential GOP nominee Donald Trump.

“Individuals who hold or held a security clearance and handled classified material could become a security threat if they develop dementia and unwittingly share government secrets,” the study says.

“As people live longer and retire later, challenges associated with cognitive impairment in the workplace will need to be addressed,” the report says. “Our limited research suggests this concern is an emerging security blind spot.”

As The Intercept points out, The U.S.’s current leadership is the oldest in history.

Read the full report over at The Intercept.


Most New Yorkers say they support American dream, but many OK with ending immigration, poll says

2023/09/12
Statue City Cruises, part of City Experiences, celebrates the Statue of Liberty's 136th birthday on Oct. 27, 2022, in New York City. -
 Eugene Gologursky/Getty Images North America/TNS

NEW YORK — A majority of New Yorkers say the U.S. should live out welcoming words etched on the Statue of Liberty, but almost a third say the country does not need to continue welcoming any new immigrants, according to a new poll released as the state struggles with the strain of the asylum-seeker crisis.

In the statewide Siena College survey, published Tuesday, the Statue of Liberty exhortation — “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free” — received support from 69% of voters, with 21% opposed.

And a broad, bipartisan majority of New Yorkers said assimilating immigrants into the American melting pot made the nation great, according to the poll. About as large a share of Republicans (77%) and Democrats (83%) said assimilating arrivals made the country strong.

“There’s no doubt, the vast majority of New Yorkers recognize that our country was built by immigrants from virtually every nation around the globe and assimilating immigrants has made America great,” Don Levy, director of the Siena College Research Institute, said in a statement.

The poll offered the latest slate of public opinion data as ongoing waves of migration across America’s southwestern border strain New York City, which is caring for about 60,000 asylum seekers, according to government data.

But even as the survey showed robust recognition of immigrants’ roles building the country, it also suggested a wide swath of New Yorkers would be happy to see New York’s doors shut completely to the outside.

In the poll, 30% of respondents said the U.S. no longer needs new immigrants. And a slim majority of Republicans — 51% against 46% — said America does not need new immigrants. Perhaps paradoxically, a majority of Republicans also said the U.S. should continue to live out the words in the Statue of Liberty.

Only 22% of Democrats said the U.S. does not need new immigrants, the poll found.

Observers increasingly see the migrant crisis as a political hot potato, with the 2024 elections emerging on the horizon and the city opening more migrant shelters in neighborhoods across the five boroughs, sparking GOP angst.

Siena said it surveyed 800 New York residents last week for the poll.

© New York Daily News
 NO WAR BUT CLASS WAR!
Watch: Billionaire CEO says unemployment 'has to jump' to put 'arrogant' workers in their place

Brad Reed
September 12, 2023, 1:47 PM ET

Financial Review/X/Screengrab

An aggrieved billionaire this week lamented that workers had grown lazy and "arrogant" during the coronavirus pandemic and that many of them needed to be made unemployed for the situation to improve.

The Australian Financial Review reports that Tim Gurner, the founder and CEO of the Gurner Group, expressed dismay at the current state of his country's labor force.

"People decided that they didn't really want to work so much anymore through COVID and that has had a massive issue on productivity," he said. "They have been paid a lot to not do too much in the last few years, and we need to see that change."

Gurner then outlined just what such changes would entail.

"We need to see unemployment rise," he argued. "Unemployment has to jump 40 to 50 percent, in my view. We need to see some pain in the economy. We need to remind people that they work for the employer, not the other way around... There's been a systemic change where the employees feel that the employer is extremely lucky to have them, as opposed to the other way around."

Gurner then predicted that enacting massive layoffs would lead to "less arrogance in the employment market."

Watch the video below or at this link.










'Obscene': Clean Up Alabama wants state to dump 'Marxist' American Library Association

WHAT'S WRONG WITH MARXISM?
Marxism and Literature realized. in its full implications. Hardly anyone becomes a Marxist for primarily cultural or literary reasons, but for compelling.
113 pages

Mar 5, 2012 — The historical novel. by: Lukács, György, 1885-1971. Publication date: 1963. Topics: Historical fiction. Publisher: Boston, Beacon Press.
PS THE ALA IS NOT MARXIST

September 13, 2023

The latest group to try to block books on queer topics from children, Clean Up Alabama, is trying to reform the state’s library system. One of its goals is for Alabama to “End our association, participation, and use of the far left marxist organization that is the American Library Association,” according to its website.

The group started earlier this year as Clean Up Prattville, according to LGBTQ Nation, focusing specifically on the Autauga-Prattville Public Library. Clean Up Alabama says on its website that “many Alabama libraries have been stocking their shelves with books intended to confuse the children of our communities about sexuality and expose them to material that is inappropriate for them.”

Clean Up Alabama says its mission is to remove “pornographic, obscene, and indecent books” from children’s sections of the libraries. One of its major goals is a withdrawal from the ALA—claiming on its site that the “ALA believes that children should be able to view pornography in the name of freedom of expression.”

READ MORE: Texas County to Consider Shutting Down Library After Judge Orders Books With LGBTQ and Racial Content Returned to Shelves

While the ALA does fight for readers to be able to access whatever books they want, the books Clean Up Alabama wants banned are not “pornographic.” The Clean Up Prattville site includes a list of books the organization objects to, along with excerpts from the books. For example, Looking for Alaska by John Green is on the list. One of the offending excerpts follows:

…I’m in the middle of a sentence about analogies or something and like a hawk he reaches down and he honks my boob. HONK. A much-too-firm, two- to three-second HONK. And the first thing I thought was Okay, how do I extricate this claw from my boob before it leaves permanent marks?…”

Nick and Charlie by Heartstopper author Alice Oseman—about a young gay couple—is also on the list. The included excerpt has a scene where the titular characters have sex, but this is the most explicit it gets:
I can’t think about anything else when he’s running his hands so gently through my hair, across my back, over my hips. I ask if we should take our clothes of and he’s saying yes before I’ve even finished ay sentence, and then he’s pulling my T-shirt off and laughing when I can’t undo his shirt buttons, he’s undoing my belt, I’m reaching into his bedside drawer for a condom, we’re kissing again, we’re rolling over obviously you can see where this is going.

Though there’s a petition on Clean Up Alabama’s site calling for the ALA withdrawal, the Alabama Political Reporter reports the group wants to change the state’s anti-obscenity law to remove an exemption for libraries. If the group gets its way, librarians could face a year in jail and a fine of up to $10,000 for providing books deemed “harmful” to minors.

Clean Up Alabama has allies among some state Republicans. Representatives Susan Dubose, Rick Rehm and Bill Lamb have supported the group’s efforts to withdraw from the ALA, according to the Political Reporter. Representatives Ernie Yarbrough, Mack Butler and House Majority Leader Scott Stadthagen also have supported the group. Governor Kay Ivey sent the Alabama Public Library Service a letter echoing Clean Up America’s complaints, though the letter does not directly refer to the group, according to the Political Reporter.

On September 5, Clean Up Prattville proposed to the city council that the group take control of the public library via a service contract. The proposal was rejected in a 4-3 vote, according to AL.com. The local library director, Andrew Foster, told AL.com that the group’s campaign started over one book, The Pronoun Book, a book directed at children up to 3 years old explaining what pronouns are.

“There was an incident where a family checked out a book called the ‘Pronoun Book’, took it home before realizing it was an inclusive pronoun book, that it wasn’t just binary, he and she, but instead had some other representations in the book,” he told the outlet.
BC
TOOK LONG ENOUGH💩💩💩
Poop bags are now available at rock climbing sites in Squamish and nope, they're not for your pets

Story by Rafferty Baker • CBC

There's no delicate way to describe a new program launched for rock climbers in B.C.'s Squamish area, meant to reduce human waste being deposited in the forest.

About 64 kilometres north of Vancouver — around the halfway point to Whistler — organizers are providing bags for climbers to poop into, seal up, and pack out of the wilderness to dispose of appropriately.

The Waste Alleviating Gel (WAG) bag program has been set up by the Squamish Access Society (SAS) in partnership with B.C. Parks, and sponsored by businesses in the climbing industry.

"There's been an explosion in the usage of our backcountry areas in southwest B.C. and the sea-to-sky corridor, and rock climbing is very much a part of that," said Ben Webster, SAS chair.

"Increasingly we are finding that there are issues with human waste, particularly in our more remote crags."


A Waste Alleviating Gel (WAG) bag is a robust bag with powder inside that will turn liquid into gel. It's meant to be used as portable, single-use toilet in the wilderness or other situations where facilities aren't available. (Ben Webster/Squamish Access Society)© Provided by cbc.ca

Webster said it's usually dogs who find the waste in the forest around the base of popular cliffs frequented by climbers, but sometimes it's found by people — and in very rare, but "absolutely awful" occasions, a climber will reach a small ledge part of the way up a cliff to find someone has relieved themselves there.

Two stores that sell climbing equipment in Squamish, Valhalla Pure and Climb On, have contributed to the program as sponsors, and B.C. Parks has funded the WAG bag stations within its parks.


Katy Holm, one of the owners of Climb On, was careful not to blame the rock climbing community for the general issue with human waste in the Squamish area, saying much of it is associated with people camping or living in their vehicles, and the broader recreational popularity of the region.

"I don't think it is acutely an issue at crags," said Holm, though the program is limited to distributing the bags at crags, or cliffs with climbing routes.

Holm said using the bags is common practice at many rock climbing destinations in the U.S., especially places in deserts.

"Climbers are most certainly familiar with this," she said. "Those that have travelled won't see it as something new, but I'm sure others will have challenges adopting."

She said the bags aren't anything like the flimsy little bags people use to pick up their pets' poop.

"It's totally robust. You don't have a fear that it's going to explode or anything. You can roll it up, there's no smell. It doesn't feel dirty at all," said Holm.

Webster agreed that for some people in the climbing community in B.C., it will be a paradigm shift to start pooping into bags and hauling it out of the forest.

He said five stations have already been set up at crags, with four more expected to be ready in the next two weeks, and the stations have already required restocking — something that was expected, as people grab a WAG bag to throw in their pack for whenever it's required.

"We are excited for people to grab them, use them and maybe people will be brave enough to tell their friends they've been using them, because that will get the word out there," said Webster.


A sign on a Waste Alleviating Gel (WAG) bag station details the steps required to use the bags to poop in the wilderness without leaving a trace: take a bag, poop into it, pack it out of the woods and dispose of it in a garbage bin. (Emilisa Frirdich/Squamish Access Society)© Provided by cbc.ca

Gripped.com

https://gripped.com/news/three-ways-to-deal-with-poop-and-rock-climbing

May 1, 2021 ... Don't “go” in the bag, but on the ground and then poop-and-scoop it into the bag. Bags are often the most recommended form of waste disposal, as ...


BC
‘Pile of lumber’: Kootenay Lake shipwreck explored by humans for 1st time since 1997

By Elizabeth McSheffrey Global News
Posted September 12, 2023

 One hundred and twenty-five years ago, nine people died during the sinking of a sternwheeler ship in Kootenay Lake. It took almost a century before the vessel's wreckage was found. Catherine Urquhart reports.

A team of scuba divers from B.C. and Alberta have “relocated” a historic shipwreck in Kootenay Lake and explored it, finding a significant amount of structural collapse since the last expedition.

The 25-metre sternwheeler called the City of Ainsworth sunk in a storm on Nov. 29, 1898. Nine people were killed in what the BC Heritage Branch describes as the “largest maritime disaster” in the history of the province’s inland lakes.

The vessel’s whereabouts were unknown until 1990, when it was found at a depth of 110 metres. A dive team explored the wreckage in 1997, but since then, only submersibles have made the venture.

“We’ve been planning this for at least five years, and this year, it finally all came together,” said Brian Nadwidny, a lead diver on the most recent expedition, which took place between Aug. 28 and Sept. 2.
“People ask me, was I excited when I first saw the wreck? And all I could think when I first saw it was, ‘OK, it’s time to get to work.'”

To dive to depths as deep as the wreckage of the City of Ainsworth requires special training. When the first dive team went down in 1997, it was the deepest scuba dive to a shipwreck in Canadian history at the time.

It took 10 years to assemble the gear and a team with enough qualified divers, Nadwidny told Global News. In the end, seven people, including surface support, ventured out into Kootenay Lake.

The scuba divers went down in pairs three times, with each dive limited to 10 minutes in length. The first time, Nadwidny said he and his partner saw nothing but mud, with their shot line roughly 30 feet away from their target.

“We repositioned the shot line,” he said. “I went down two days later with Johnny Ryan and I got some more footage of it.

“With it only being 10 minutes, we really didn’t have a lot of time to look at the wreck as a whole. It was basically hit the ground and start filming and shooting pictures right away.”

The bottom of Kootenay Lake is especially muddy, Nadwidny added, so divers had to take extra care not to land on its floor and stir up the dirt, obscuring visibility.

Over the course of their dives, the team found that the wreckage had “deteriorated significantly” from 1997, with the upper deck now totally collapsed and the main deck collapsed on the starboard side.

The wheelhouse is still there, but Nadwidny described the City of Ainsworth as “mostly a pile of lumber.”

“The only thing really left standing is the wall on the port side with a door and a window, and of course, the paddle wheel’s intact as well,” he said. “Also still standing at the bow is the flagpole and the capstan.”

Few artifacts were found, he added, apart from a work bench with a vice on it and a bell near the rear of the ship in the machinery area. Nadwidny said it once had a line attached to it that led to the wheelhouse, which the captain would pull when he wanted to go faster or slower.

According to the BC Heritage Branch, the City of Ainsworth is considered a “significant example” of advanced late-19th century marine technology. Its paddlewheel, which has offset bucket planks meant to reduce vibration, is the only one of its kind documented in the province.

The vessel was built in 1892 in the mining town of Ainsworth and was part of a transportation network that carried freight and passengers to communities along Kootenay Lake, and as far away as Bonners Ferry in Idaho.



Nadwidny said he’s been dreaming of diving to the City of Ainsworth for more than a decade. He, and everyone else on the team, all want to go back for another venture next year to collect more invaluable footage.

“What we’re going to do next time is we’re going to focus more on certain areas rather than just trying to shoot the whole thing in 10 minutes,” he said.

“We plan to go next year and focus on maybe, just the bow for the one dive, or maybe just the midships for the one dive, maybe just the wheelhouse for one dive. That way, after we do about five or six dives on it, we’ll get a better idea of what the state of things are exactly and have a better record for future people to look at.”

After the dives were complete, the team of seven laid flowers in the water in honour of the lives lost on the vessel.

Johnny Ryan, Glenn Farquhar and Alan Drake were on the dive team with Nadwidny, and John McCuaig, Cathie McCuiag and Terina Hancock made up the surface support team.

“Everybody had an equal part in getting this done. This is not a dive that’s done easily,” said Nadwidny.

Kootenay Lake
Kootenay Lake is a lake located in British Columbia, Canada. It is part of the Kootenay River. The lake has been raised by the Corra Linn Dam and has a dike system at the southern end, which, along with industry in the 1950s–70s, has changed the ecosystem in and around the water. The Kootenay Lake f... Wikipedia