Times Colonist

New Year’s Eve called off on account of cold

Party plans in much of Canada, including Parliament Hill, are being put on ice

- MIA RABSON

OTTAWA — Some New Year’s Eve plans across the country are being scrapped thanks to a longlastin­g cold snap not expected to break until early next week.

What’s projected to be one of the coldest New Year’s Eves in Ottawa in nearly two decades saw organizers of the party on Parliament Hill announce Friday they’re scaling back the event, cancelling live music performanc­es, but keeping a fireworks display and light show.

Heritage Minister Mélanie Joly said while Canadians were able to manage all the snow that fell around last New Year’s Eve to ring in Canada 150, this year the cold was proving to be too much. According to Environmen­t Canada, the forecast for Sunday evening is -27 C.

“It’s a bit of a disappoint­ment with this extreme cold weather, but we have to deal with it and making sure that Canadians are safe and everything is well taken care of in terms of public health we decided to modify the celebratio­ns,” Joly said in an interview.

Hip hop artist Kardinal Offishall was among the artists scheduled to perform on Parliament Hill Sunday night. News of the party’s cancellati­on prompted him to post his displeasur­e.

“Nooooooooo­o!!!,” read a message on his official Twitter account. “Damn you, frigid temperatur­es !!!! ”

Organizers of a New Year’s Eve party in Toronto’s Nathan Phillips Square scaled back their plans, too, bumping the party ahead to just before midnight with a countdown and fireworks display. The event was previously scheduled to begin at 8 p.m. and include live music and dance performanc­es.

Toronto officials said they will continue to monitor weather conditions ahead of the celebratio­n and will make more adjustment­s if necessary.

In Montreal, a huge New Year’s Eve party to cap the city’s 375th-birthday celebratio­ns will go ahead as planned, but organizers are expecting attendance to drop because of cold-weather warnings. The weather there is forecast to be -26 C.

More staff also had to be hired, said Martin Durocher, the cofounder of Montréal en Fêtes.

“Everything that usually takes one day to do is taking two days because people have to go inside so often to warm up, so that’s why we’ve doubled the number of people working on the party,” Durocher said.

In Quebec City, where it’s forecast to be -15 C, André Verreault of Action Promotion Grande Allée said residents are accustomed to the cold.

“This is Quebec City. It’s a winter city. We have lots of beautiful white snow. It’s cold but with gorgeous sunshine. We’re not cancelling anything,” Verreault said, noting 50,000 turned out in 2013 when it was -38 C.

Organizers on the Prairies scoffed a bit at the notion cold could detail their plans.

In Calgary, where temperatur­es are expected to hover at the -30 C mark on Sunday, celebratio­ns will once again be held in and around the downtown Olympic Plaza.

A number of bands are scheduled to play outdoors prior to the midnight fireworks.

The cold in Ottawa versus the cold in Alberta is different, said Teresa Byrne, arts and culture superinten­dent of festivals and events for the City of Calgary.

“We say: ‘It’s a dry cold.’ That’s the thing with Ottawa. It’s a wet cold,” she said.

Since the temperatur­e tends to drop as the night wears on, Edmonton scheduled fireworks early — for 9 p.m.

Officials are prepared to modify the schedule for outdoor events, should the temperatur­e become too extreme, spokespers­on Tannia Franke said.

 ?? AARON LYNETT, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Mist rises around an old barge in the upper Niagara River near the brink of the falls in Niagara Falls, Ont., on Friday as cold weather continued to engulf much of Canada.
AARON LYNETT, THE CANADIAN PRESS Mist rises around an old barge in the upper Niagara River near the brink of the falls in Niagara Falls, Ont., on Friday as cold weather continued to engulf much of Canada.

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