Calgary floods: Some neighbourhoods to reopen as waters recede
 					ANDY CLARK / REUTERS
A resident walks along a flooded street with the downtown rising in the background, in Calgary. Some 1,300 troops were deployed to help with rescues and the mandatory evacuations that forced 100,000 people from their homes in Calgary and thousands more in the small towns surrounding the city.
CALGARY—Much of  Calgary remained soaked by flood water Saturday, but there was some good  news — the sun was out, rivers were receding and at least some evacuees  were being allowed to return home.
 Still, flood officials  were warning that nothing would happen quickly and they were urging  displaced people to stay away from their neighbourhoods until the city  said it was safe.
 "Folks, we've turned a corner," said Mayor Naheed Nenshi.
 "However, the No. 1  thing that I need to share with all of you is that we're still in a  state of emergency. It's sunny out, it's nice out, but we are still in a  state of emergency."
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     An estimated 75,000  people have been forced from their homes in more than two dozen  neighbourhoods along the Bow and Elbow Rivers in the city.
 Residents in a section of one of those neighbourhoods — the high ground in Discovery Ridge — have been allowed back.
 Officials were hoping  to be able to open up portions of six more neighbourhoods that didn't  flood. The names of those neighbourhoods will be posted on the city's  website.
 Officials said it would probably be mid-week at the earliest before access to the city's downtown core is fully restored.
 The flood has hit some  of the city's iconic structures hard. The 19,000-seat Saddledome, home  to the NHL's Calgary Flames, was flooded up to the 10th row, while water  lapped at the roof of the chuckwagon barns at the grounds of the  Calgary Stampede, which is scheduled to start in two weeks.
 Nenshi has said the city will do everything it can to make sure that the world-renowned party goes ahead.
 The federal  Conservatives were to hold their convention in the city next weekend,  but announced Saturday that it would be postponed to a later date.
 "After being in  discussions with various authorities regarding the situation, it became  clear that holding the national convention at this time would not be in  the best interests of the people of Calgary," said Conservative Party  president John Walsh.
 Flows on the smaller  Elbow River were expected to decrease by 60 per cent over the next 48  hours. Flows on the larger Bow were forecast to go down by 25 per cent  over the same period.
 Even with the  improvement, Nenshi noted that the flow rates were still higher than the  last big flood in Calgary eight years ago.
 "Remember that these  numbers are still four times higher than they were in the floods of  2005, so we're still dealing with very, very high numbers," he said.
 While the news was promising in Calgary, communities downstream were bracing for their own crisis.
 Water levels were  rising in Medicine Hat, while officials with Saskatchewan's Water  Security Agency were preparing for the possibility of an evacuation  order for Cumberland House by Monday.
 Medicine Hat declared a  state of emergency Friday afternoon, saying it was expecting its river  to crest Saturday night. Ten thousand residents in low-lying areas were  told to get out of their homes by Saturday morning.
 "We're planning for the worst," Mayor Norm Boucher told the Medicine Hat News.
 "We have to make sure  that people are safe, and if we can protect some properties we will do  that, but water and electricity are so important. People have to live  and people will come back … we'll come through this."
 Lethbridge was also  preparing for high waters, but no evacuations were ordered and radio  station CJOC reported that a local state of emergency was lifted  Saturday morning.
 The Alberta government  has estimated that roughly 100,000 people have been affected by  flooding across the southern part of the province.
 High River, southwest of Calgary, was one of the hardest-hit areas.
 Mounties confirmed  Friday that three bodies had been found in the Highwood River near the  community. The bodies of a man and a woman were recovered Friday.
 The third body — a  woman — was located Friday but couldn't be recovered. RCMP Insp. Garrett  Woolsey says that happened Saturday morning near Turner Valley. It was  believed to be the body of a woman who disappeared after her mobile home  was swept away on Thursday.
 Woolsey said they've  received reports of a fourth body being swept down the river, but police  have not been able to confirm that.
 It is estimated that  half the people in the town of 13,000 experienced flooding in their  homes. Roads and bridges have been swamped, police have cut off access  to most of the town and helicopters have been circling overhead. Cars  lie submerged in water, abandoned, while backhoes work in vain to push  water back from houses.
 Town spokeswoman Joan  Botkin said the public is no longer allowed to enter the community. She  said the lockdown was to ensure property is safe from looters.
 "The town is closed off to all public ... everybody," said Botkin.
 "That is mainly for  security purposes. We have to ensure that people's properties are safe  because they had to leave in a hurry. We need to know that their  property and the property of business owners are safe."
 Only emergency  personnel are allowed in High River and about 390 soldiers were joining  Mounties in a door-to-door search of residences.
 Botkin said she realizes that is frustrating for people.
 "Residents can't get into town and they're worried, they're anxious, many people are worried about their pets right now."
 Botkin said a number  of animals have been rescued and taken to a local kennel. A plan is  being formulated so people will know their pets are there and they can  find out if they are safe.
 The search of homes has been focused primarily on the town's northwest. Botkin said searchers can't get into all areas.
 "The water is still too high."
 There are residents who are refusing to leave and have decided to wait things out until the mandatory evacuation is lifted.
 "We have strenuously  urged them to please go. They have no water, no sewer, they're going to  be running out of food soon," she said.
 There is still a  serious problem with High River's waste water system. The main pump  station is under water. The water treatment plant is OK, but the wells  have been compromised and a boil-water advisory is in place.
 The mountain town of Canmore was also hit hard.
 Resident Wade Graham was in one of the flood-stricken areas and painted a bleak picture Friday evening.
 "The water's not  running anymore. We don't have gas. It's kind of like life has become  pretty basic now. You know, how do you find food, are you sleeping well  and are you warm?" he said.
 "We've got supplies here, but depending on how long this lasts, it could be entertaining for sure."