Waterloo Region Record

Storm shuts schools, offices

- Alison Auld and Aly Thomson

HALIFAX — A powerful storm pummelled Atlantic Canada on Thursday, shutting down everything from schools to bridges with an intense mix of high winds, rain and snow.

“This is definitely a very serious and very intense winter system,” said Environmen­t Canada meteorolog­ist Ian Hubbard.

Social media images showed one Halifax house with its roof gone, and another building that had partially collapsed.

While parts of Nova Scotia were whipped by wind and rain amid temperatur­es well above freezing, New Brunswicke­rs faced heavy snow that made it impossible to see across the street.

“If you are in your home and don’t need to travel, don’t travel,” said Greg MacCallum, director of New Brunswick’s Emergency Measures Organizati­on, who called it a “serious storm.”

Environmen­t Canada warned high waves combined with storm surges could cause damage along the coast in Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island later in the evening, and that flooding was also likely in those areas.

The agency issued warnings for everything from wind and rain to blizzards and storm surges along much of the Atlantic coast.

“It’s the whole spectrum of weather with this system — you pick a weather and it’s forecast somewhere in Atlantic Canada, it seems,” said Hubbard.

The federal agency had issued a range of winter storm warnings and watches for Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, P.E.I. and parts of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, saying the low-pressure system would bring fierce winds that could gust up to about 130 kilometres an hour and snowfall amounts of up to 40 centimetre­s.

Nova Scotia was expected to see up to 50 millimetre­s of rain, possibly causing flooding.

By Thursday afternoon, many lights were out across Nova Scotia. About 48,000 utility customers were without power as of about 4:30 p.m., many along the Atlantic coast.

In downtown Halifax, the wind started to howl early in the afternoon, sending sheets of rain sideways, stinging pedestrian­s as they headed home early from work.

Halifax also pulled its buses off the road at 4 p.m., closed the city’s Public Gardens and shut one of two harbour bridges because of the winds.

All of New Brunswick was under a winter storm warning and the central and northern parts of the province were expected to see roughly 40 centimetre­s of snow, along with wind gusts of up to 90 km/h in some areas.

MacCallum said EMO is working with the Red Cross to identify warming centres and shelters in the event people are left without power for an extended time.

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The Halifax Transit ferry Craig Blake makes its way across the harbour in Halifax on Thursday. Service was later suspended.
ANDREW VAUGHAN, THE CANADIAN PRESS The Halifax Transit ferry Craig Blake makes its way across the harbour in Halifax on Thursday. Service was later suspended.

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