Nearly all infrastructure costs for the development of the Mission Mountain Road and the Bridge River Road were born by local citizens, as was the "New Road" through the canyon from Terzaghi Dam to
Moha. and
Lillooet A medical crisis in Bralorne, the most important of the
Bridge River gold towns, at the far upper end of that valley, prompted community efforts to build a road via the
Bridge River Canyon directly to
Lillooet. The completion of the hydro project in 1962 reduced the importance of the Mission Mountain Road and Shalalth in turn. Shalalth remains without easy road access, the only two routes in and out of the valley being extremely difficult mountain roads – the Mission Mountain Road, and a
BC Hydro road along
Anderson Lake known as the High-Line Road. This leads to
D'Arcy (
N'quatqua) at the far end of that lake, which connects by regular road to
Highway 99 at
Mount Currie, and from there to
Pemberton,
Whistler,
Squamish and
Vancouver. The railway discourages locals from walking the track to Lillooet. Remnants of the old
Lillooet Trail catwalks on the cliffs above the rail line are unsafe. Mountain goats and sheep remain common on the slopes above Shalalth, and especially along the bluffs around Retaskit and at Seton Beach, at the Lillooet end of the lake. ==Climate==