Close X
Tuesday, October 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Gruelling days and gratitude for Canadian line workers helping with hurricane outages

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Oct, 2024 02:42 PM
  • Gruelling days and gratitude for Canadian line workers helping with hurricane outages

Stéphan Perreault and his team have been helping restore power in North Carolina since Hurricane Helene hit in late September, and they don't expect to be heading home any time soon.

They are some of the hundreds — possibly thousands — of Canadian line workers who have been called into service to help rebuild power grids after Helene and now Hurricane Milton have left millions of Americans in the dark.

Perreault says the line workers have witnessed scenes of devastation from Helene while operating 16 hours per day in challenging conditions that include washed out roads and power grids wiped out by wind and flooding.

"We see homes carried away by water, we see cars buried under mud, we see completely destroyed electrical grids," he said. Hurricane Helene also caused at least 227 deaths. While Perreault hasn't seen any loss of human life himself, he said the workers have witnessed plenty of tough moments, including meeting distraught people who have lost homes and pets.

Perreault said the team's work around Asheville, N.C., was starting to near completion when Milton hit. He said some teams have already headed toward northern Florida to help with that storm, which initially left some three million without power, and he expects to follow.

Ontario's Hydro One said Thursday it had sent 50 additional workers to help restore power in Florida after Milton, in addition to the 100 who were sent to the United States after Helene. Nova Scotia Power sent about 35 people to Florida. "It’s important to help our neighbours and they do the same to support us during major storms here in Nova Scotia," the utility said.

Perreault says the pair of companies he works for — Gagnon Line Construction and Holland Power Service — have more than 700 people on the ground from several provinces, including Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick. Perreault, who is based in Quebec's Eastern Townships, says many power companies, including Hydro-Québec and local companies in Sherbrooke, Magog, Coaticook and Jonquière, have allowed their employees to take leave to join the effort in the U.S.

Daniel Dumas of Quebec-based power line company EEA says the teams in North Carolina have been living in difficult conditions, sleeping 16 people to a trailer and eating at a food tent in a makeshift workers camp. Dumas, who was heading to join the team on Friday, said they wake up at 5:30 a.m. and work until 9 or 9:30 p.m. rebuilding the washed-out grid.

But he says they're encouraged by the gratitude shown to the Canadian crews who are greeted "like heroes" by citizens who offer food, coffee and thanks. In one memorable moment, a preacher even approached one of the work trucks to bless the crew, he said.

"We could fill up pickup trucks with all the doughnuts, and fill a pool with all the coffee we've been given," he said. "Lots of food, lots of recognition, people are very grateful." 

Perreault says the same. While the trip has been filled with difficult moments, he's also been struck by small gestures of kindness, including from people who have offered the use of their ATVs and golf carts and brought out snacks and water, and restaurants that have quickly jumped to feed the hungry workers.

Pierre Duval, an employee of Ontario-based Sproule Powerline, was heading from South Carolina to Florida on Friday. He said he saw flooding, downed power lines, and trees that fell on houses, "like you see on TV."

"It's a mess … just a mess," he said. 

Duval, from Alfred and Plantagenet, Ont., said the job in recent weeks has been challenging, but it's nothing he isn't used to — except for the heat. He's been in the United States for about two weeks so far, and said he had no idea when he'd be heading home. 

"Oh my God, I don't know," he said. "I don't call the shots for that. Whenever they release us, we just go back home and it's a three-day drive back."

MORE National ARTICLES

2 vehicle crash in Richmond

2 vehicle crash in Richmond
Mounties in Richmond say they're investigating a two-vehicle crash that injured two pedestrians. They say it happened on Sunday when a Ford Edge S-U-V turned into a Toyota Tundra on Number 4 Road, then careened onto the sidewalk where three people were standing. 

2 vehicle crash in Richmond

Lawyers looking for thousands of families owed money by Veterans Affairs

Lawyers looking for thousands of families owed money by Veterans Affairs
Lawyers are trying to get in touch with hundreds of thousands of people who are owed money through a class-action lawsuit against Veterans Affairs. The suit was launched after the Office of the Veterans Ombud found the government had been improperly calculating the disability benefits and pensions of its clients starting in 2003.

Lawyers looking for thousands of families owed money by Veterans Affairs

Eleven-year-old boy drowns after inflated tube flips in B.C. lake

Eleven-year-old boy drowns after inflated tube flips in B.C. lake
RCMP say an 11-year-old boy has drowned in Wasa Lake, north of Cranbrook in southeastern B.C. Police say the boy was out with two other children on Sunday on an inflated tube when it flipped in high winds and rough water. 

Eleven-year-old boy drowns after inflated tube flips in B.C. lake

'Big bang': Explosion destroys Winnipeg home and damages others, no injuries reported

'Big bang': Explosion destroys Winnipeg home and damages others, no injuries reported
An explosion Wednesday reduced a Winnipeg house to rubble and significantly damaged nearby homes. Emergency crews were called to the bungalow on Camrose Bay in the Transcona neighbourhood shortly after 11 a.m.

'Big bang': Explosion destroys Winnipeg home and damages others, no injuries reported

Second degree murder charge in Sicamous

Second degree murder charge in Sicamous
A 37-year-old man has been charged with second-degree murder in the death of a 66-year-old woman in Sicamous.  R-C-M-P say paramedics tried to save Jo Ann Jackson last week when she was found unresponsive in the driveway of a mobile home park, but she was pronounced dead at the scene.

Second degree murder charge in Sicamous

Burnaby RCMP seize catalytic converters

Burnaby RCMP seize catalytic converters
Mounties in Burnaby have seized 439 catalytic converters in a lengthy theft and trafficking investigation. R-C-M-P say they found the converters after conducting search warrants at four locations linked to one man who allegedly ran a mobile metal recycling business.

Burnaby RCMP seize catalytic converters