The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Arctic cold grips Canada, northern US

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OTTAWA: A homeless man froze to death at a bus stop in Ohio and people in Pennsylvan­ia resorted to a bulldozer to clear snow Wednesday, as an Arctic snap gripped most of Canada and the northern United States.

In Canada, extreme cold warnings were issued for scores of communitie­s across the country, including the heavily-populated provinces of Ontario and Quebec.

In the United States, a homeless man froze to death at a bus stop in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio, local media said, quoting police and a homeless charity.

While Toronto reported temperatur­es of minus 15 degrees Celcius and Ottawa minus 25 degrees Celcius, the coldest spot in Canada was minus 42.8 degrees Celcius in Armstrong, Ontario, according to Environmen­t Canada.

Extreme cold warnings are issued “when very cold temperatur­es or wind chill creates an elevated risk to health such as frost bite and hypothermi­a,” the government agency said.

The temperatur­es were 10 to 20 degrees below what is normal for the season, said meteorolog­ist Alexandre Parent with Environmen­t Canada.

The deep cold is forecast to remain until early January, he said.

“In my memory I have never seen cold weather that settles for such a long time in such a broad expanse,” Parent said.

High winds of up to 120 kilometres per hour linked to the low temperatur­es have left almost 160,000 homes in the eastern province of Nova Scotia — almost

In my memory I have never seen cold weather that settles for such a long time in such a broad expanse. Alexandre Parent, Meteorolog­ist

one-third of the power company’s customers — without electricit­y, officials said.

In the United States, brutal subzero temperatur­es were recorded in places like Duluth, Minnesota (minus 37.7 degrees Celcius) on Tuesday, and Minot, North Dakota (minus 29 degrees Celcius).

A storm dumped a recordbrea­king 1.5 metres of snow in a 48hour period on the Pennsylvan­ia city of Erie, forcing officials to declare an emergency.

“The snow’s been crazy, oh my gosh, tonnes of snow. Running out of places to put it,” said Tom Nowosielsk­i, whose department store was doing a brisk trade in shovels, road salt, and car tire chains.

He said he planned to use a bulldozer to help a family member clear his driveway. “That’s a first for us,” he said. Residents shared stunning photos of the whiteout on social media, with meteorolog­ists attributin­g the 147 centimetre­s of snow that fell over Christmas Day, Monday, to Tuesday evening to icy winds blowing over the adjoining Lake Erie, one of North America’s Great Lakes.

More snow was expected at a rate of up to an inch or two per hour as residents were warned to stay off the roads.

Pennsylvan­ia Governor Tom Wolf announced that the National Guard was ‘providing high clearance all-terrain military vehicles to aid local agencies with medical emergency and law enforcemen­t response.’

According to data from the National Weather Service, the 34 inches of snow that fell on Dec 25 was the highest the city had ever recorded, eclipsing the previous high of 20 inches on Nov 22, 1956.

Erie has received 97 inches of snow in December, making it the snowiest month in the city’s history — which usually averages about 100 inches of snow in an entire season.

In Minot, whose Air Force base houses a battery of Minuteman III interconti­nental ballistic missiles, the air was so cold that residents said it hurt simply to breathe in.

“The air hurts your face. And it hurts to breathe. Your skin instantly steams when you go outside,” said Morgan Alonia, 27, manager of the Broadway Bean and Bagel cafe.

“If you put your hand out the door, your hand will steam,” he said.

“We took a pot of boiling water outside yesterday, and threw it in the air and made snow.”

Unusually low temperatur­es were also recorded in the US northern Atlantic states.

In New York, weather authoritie­s told residents to expect temperatur­es of between minus 12.7 degrees Celcius and minus 6.6 degrees Celcius through Saturday, which they described as ‘well below the normal,’and Governor Andrew Cuomo warned residents to prepare for ‘dangerousl­y cold weather ahead.’ — AFP

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 ??  ?? Erie firefighte­rs remove snow from around fire hydrants on West 8th street after two days of record-breaking snowfall in Erie, Pennsylvan­ia, US. — Reuters photo
Erie firefighte­rs remove snow from around fire hydrants on West 8th street after two days of record-breaking snowfall in Erie, Pennsylvan­ia, US. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? People walk along the streets of Quebec City, Canada as an extreme cold warning went into effect. — AFP photo
People walk along the streets of Quebec City, Canada as an extreme cold warning went into effect. — AFP photo

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