The table below shows the headline status across the five affected jurisdictions as of Tuesday, April 21, 2026. Full details follow by province.
Ontario: Sudbury Declares a State of Emergency
Officials in Greater Sudbury declared a state of emergency on Tuesday morning, saying the designation would allow the city to respond more quickly to rising water levels. According to the reporting from The Canadian Press, city crews are working around the clock to monitor and manage municipal infrastructure, and residents have been urged to take precautions to protect themselves and their property.
Sudbury is not Ontario's only flood story this week. Provincial flood maps showed warnings in place across parts of southern, central, and northern Ontario at the same time Sudbury made its declaration. This follows the multi-community emergency pattern already taking shape earlier in the week in eastern Ontario, when the Ottawa River Regulation Planning Board warned of possible major flooding along the Ottawa River system.
New Brunswick: Saint John River Crosses Flood Stage
New Brunswick's Environment Department reported that the Saint John River east of Fredericton reached flood stage at 4.26 metres at Gagetown on Tuesday morning, with levels forecast to peak at about 4.4 metres over Wednesday and Thursday. Flood stage is the level at which rising water begins to drive significant costs for the province. Fredericton and Jemseg are under flood warnings. Flood watches are in effect around Saint John and Oromocto. Flood advisories have been issued for five additional locations.
Several trails along the river in Fredericton are closed. New Brunswick Emergency Measures Organization spokesperson Paul Bradley said water levels should begin to drop by Friday if the weather stays dry and cool — but warned that volumes could spike again. His message to residents was direct: stay away from the water. It is cold, fast, and full of debris, which creates real risks of hypothermia and of being swept away.
The immediate pressure on the Saint John River comes after weeks of building concern across the region, consistent with IBC's early-spring warning to Atlantic Canada homeowners as the snowpack melt began.
Manitoba: Peguis Begins Partial Evacuation
In Manitoba, Infrastructure Minister Lisa Naylor confirmed that medically vulnerable residents of Peguis First Nation, about 180 kilometres north of Winnipeg, were being moved out in a partial evacuation ahead of anticipated flooding from the nearby Fisher River. The community has been sandbagging since the previous week. Chief Stan Bird said it was not yet certain whether all of the roughly 200 or more homes that might need protection would receive sandbag barriers. Tents and teepees have been set up inside the community arena as part of contingency preparations.
Peguis is not isolated. A flood warning was in place for Brandon and four other Manitoba communities on the same day, pointing to system-wide river stress rather than a single localized event. The situation on the Fisher River tracks with the recent upgrade of Manitoba's flood outlook to high risk for the Interlake region, which warned of the potential for 2014-level flooding through Peguis.
Quebec: Gatineau Counts 250 Homes, Fort-Coulonge Under Emergency
In western Quebec, officials in Gatineau reported that a continued rise in water levels had affected about 125 additional properties, bringing the total — homes either flooded or with road access cut off — to roughly 250 as of Tuesday morning. River levels there were rising by about 10 centimetres per day, though officials said they remained hopeful conditions would stabilize later in the week.
Fort-Coulonge, a smaller community northwest of Gatineau, has been under a state of emergency since Sunday, April 19, and is the sole case the province has classified as "major" flooding. Water levels there were beginning to recede. Across Quebec, provincial data counted 11 medium-level floods and 18 minor floods in addition to the Fort-Coulonge case. Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue, west of Montreal, warned of a "real and present risk of flooding" for residents along Lac des Deux Montagnes as dikes and barriers went into place in vulnerable areas.