Friday 6 December 2013

Snowstorm slams Eastern Canada

Heavy wet snow in parts of Quebec, Ottawa area causing accidents


Eastern Canada is getting hit with its first big snowstorm of the year, a system that is expected to bring as much as 25 centimetres of snow to parts of Quebec and and eastern Ontario.

Accidents that have caused injuries have already been reported.
ottawa quebec snow storm gatineau
A woman was rescued and taken to hospital after her vehicle slid into the Gatineau RIver. She suffered hypothermia, police said. (Geneviève Garon/Radio-Canada)
Across most of southern and eastern Ontario, the system has dumped the season's first load of heavy, wet snow, with more expected through western Quebec.
As of 8 a.m. ET, 24 centimetres were recorded in the Ottawa area, much of the snow falling overnight. It should taper off by midday.
"In Montreal, 12 centimetres of snow was reported at Trudeau International Airport, but it'll switching over to rain for a combination of rain and wet snow," said CBC meteorologist Jay Scotland.
"There is the risk of freezing rain through the Eastern Townships," he said.
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Slick road conditions are blamed for this accident on a Gatineau highway, involving a Brinks armoured truck. (CBC)
"Areas north and east of the St. Lawrence are seeing this as a snow event, with 15 to 25, upwards of 30 centimetres of snow possible, including what fell last night."
Snow and slush are making for dangerous driving conditions. In western Quebec, an armoured Brinks truck overturned early Wednesday on a Gatineau expressway, sending one person to hospital and injuring two others. Elsewhere, a car slid into the Gatineau River, sending a woman to hospital with hypothermia.
All buses assigned by Eastern Ontario schools boards have been cancelled. By noon ET, about 30 accidents
were reported in Ottawa, according to Const. Chuck Benoit of the city's police force.
Farther to the east, Environment Canada says wind gusts of up to 100 km/h are in the forecast Wednesday for parts of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island and western Newfoundland.
ottawa snow storm
Leigh-Anne King emailed this photo of her family shovelling the 20 centimetres of snow that fell before 7 a.m. ET Wednesday in Ottawa. (Courtesy Leigh-Anne King)
In New Brunswick, a mixture of light snow and freezing rain in the early morning hours closed schools in the Fredericton and Oromocto areas.
The region can also expect to be drenched with between 50 and 100 millimetres of rain by Thursday.

U.S. storm slows holiday travel

The same storm system moving across Eastern Canada is also south of the border, a day before the American Thanksgiving Day holiday. About 40 million people are on the move for one of the busiest travel days in the U.S. Most of them are on the road, but an estimated three million move through airports to visit relatives.
The CBC's Meagan Fitzpatrick, reporting from Reagan International Airport in Washington, said the runways there are "really slick."
"It has been raining non-stop since 9 p.m. Tuesday and the rain is to continue all day on Wednesday.
"High winds are expected and could also present problems in the northeast part of the country," said said, adding that cancellations and delays at Reagan International are affecting arrivals more than departures.
The affected flights include an Air Canada flight from Ottawa that has been cancelled.
Source : CBC
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