Close X
Tuesday, November 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Power Out, Highways Closed: Blast Of Early Winter Cripples Southern Manitoba

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Oct, 2019 09:53 PM

    WINNIPEG - An early blast of winter-like weather knocked out power and made travel nearly impossible in many parts of southern Manitoba on Friday.

     

    Heavy, wet snow started falling Thursday to make driving a sloppy, slippery mess. The snow was expected to last into the Thanksgiving weekend.

     

    RCMP closed the Trans-Canada Highway between Portage la Prairie and Brandon because of poor conditions. Several other highways southwest of Winnipeg were also shut down.

     

    Winnipeg police reported downed power lines and numerous traffic light outages.

     

    "At this moment, we have the most Winnipeggers without power in a single day than we've ever had," Bruce Owen, public affairs officer for Manitoba Hydro, said Friday morning.

     

    "The numbers keep changing every 15 minutes. Now in Winnipeg we've got more than 26,000 people (with no electricity). The record over a two-day period is 57,000."

     

    Owen said more than 40,000 in the region were without power. He warned that despite work by Hydro staff and private contractors, it could be a bleak and dark Thanksgiving weekend for many.

     

    "We're telling our customers in Winnipeg and in rural Manitoba if you're without power you now have to be prepared for an extended outage, which is going into tomorrow and perhaps Sunday," he said.

     

    Environment Canada issued winter storm warnings across the entire southern part of the province and advised that as much as 50 centimetres of snow could fall in some areas.

     

    Winds were also an issue with gusts expected to reach 80 km/h and as high as 100 km/h off area lakes.

     

    "Travelling will become difficult if not impossible as the day wears on, with heavy, accumulating snow, strong winds and temperatures near zero resulting in treacherous conditions," the weather warning read.

     

    "The combination of heavy, wet snow and strong winds will likely result in downed trees and power lines."

     

    Owen said it was a beautiful fall day and just minutes later a full blizzard hit.

     

    "We've still got a lot of foliage on our trees and ... the wet snow clings to the foliage. Branches start to bend down over our power lines and in some cases they snap and they take the lines down."

     

    Owen had a warning for individuals eager to record the storm and post it on social media.

     

    "They're taking pictures of downed lines and taking pictures of sparking transformers. To take these pictures they're getting too close," he said. "They're also getting too close to trees that are next to a live power line.

     

    "It's extremely dangerous."

     

    An official with Manitoba Agriculture said the storm wasn't expected to have a major impact on farmers.

     

    Anastasia Kubinec, the manager of Crop Industry Development, said about 70 per cent of crops has already been harvested, the quality is very good and yields have been average to above average.

     

    There may be some pockets where farmers are struggling to get crops off, Kubinec said, but there's still the possibility what's left can be salvaged if the weather clears up.

     

    "We'll have to see how things go. This is something that we'll be able to have a better idea of in a couple of weeks."

     

    Kubinec noted the storm hadn't hit the entire province and there were areas where snow didn't fall.

     

    "They are still able to do field work and some producers are still combining today."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Report Says Why PMO Wanted Former Supreme Court Judges To Advise On SNC-Lavalin

    Ethics commissioner Mario Dion's report released Wednesday concludes that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau violated ethics law by improperly pressuring former attorney general Jody-Wilson Raybould to halt criminal prosecution of the Montreal engineering giant.

    Report Says Why PMO Wanted Former Supreme Court Judges To Advise On SNC-Lavalin

    Northerners Applaud Funding For Long-Awaited Road Through Arctic Tundra

    Work is expected to begin on the first road into the heart of Canada's mineral-rich tundra after two funding announcements this week by federal Transportation Minister Marc Garneau.

    Northerners Applaud Funding For Long-Awaited Road Through Arctic Tundra

    7 Hurt, About 100 Homes Evacuated After Blast, Fire In London, Ont.

    7 Hurt, About 100 Homes Evacuated After Blast, Fire In London, Ont.
    Seven people were injured and about 100 homes had to be evacuated after a house explosion in a southwestern Ontario city caused a massive fire late Wednesday night.    

    7 Hurt, About 100 Homes Evacuated After Blast, Fire In London, Ont.

    High Profile Could Help Jody Wilson-Raybould Keep Her Seat Away From Liberals

     There had been a few names floating around when the Liberals were seeking a candidate for the newly created riding of Vancouver Granville in the last federal election, but it soon became clear the party brass had only one person in mind.

    High Profile Could Help Jody Wilson-Raybould Keep Her Seat Away From Liberals

    Quebec Introduces New Safety Measures At Site Of Deadly Highway Crash

    Quebec Introduces New Safety Measures At Site Of Deadly Highway Crash
    MONTREAL - Quebec Transport Minister Francois Bonnardel has announced four measures to improve safety and traffic flow at the site of a deadly pileup that left four people dead this month north of Montreal.    

    Quebec Introduces New Safety Measures At Site Of Deadly Highway Crash

    'Sweet Little Boy:' Judge Finds Calgary Man Guilty In Grandson's Death

    CALGARY - A judge has found a man guilty of inflicting a fatal brain injury on his young grandson five months after the boy was sent to Canada from Mexico so he could have a better life.

    'Sweet Little Boy:' Judge Finds Calgary Man Guilty In Grandson's Death