Times Colonist

Thousands without power as storm hits East Coast

- MICHAEL TUTTON

HALIFAX — The East Coast’s first major nor’easter of the year delivered wet snow and powerful gusts that left thousands without power Saturday, even as it continued to batter Newfoundla­nd and southeaste­rn Labrador later in the day.

Environmen­t Canada said the storm delivered between 10 to 40 centimetre­s of snow to parts of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island, while winds gusted between 70 and 100 kilometres per hour on Friday.

The storm surprised many in Nova Scotia with rarely heard winter thunder echoing through the snowfall, cold rain and wind. The snow, initially heavy and damp, grew lighter and drier through the day on Saturday as temperatur­es dropped and the sun emerged in some regions.

By mid-afternoon on Saturday, Nova Scotia Power reported about 20,000 customers had lost electricit­y, while in New Brunswick there were 250 customers without power and P.E.I. had about 3,800 utility customers with outages.

Newfoundla­nd Power reported nearly 3,000 outages by 2 p.m. local time, with numbers mounting as the storm moved across the island. “We have around 400 people, including power line technician­s, forestry workers, damage assessors and others, on the ground across the province responding to this storm,” Nova Scotia Power storm co-ordinator Sean Borden said.

The utility said the heavy, wet snow and high winds broke power poles and caused trees and branches to fall onto power lines, resulting in outages.

Road conditions meant slow driving for some of the crews attempting to respond in the Annapolis Valley and Amherst.

The western part of Nova Scotia, including Clare, Digby, Bridgetown, Kingston and Coldbrook, saw some of the largest amounts of heavy snow combined with high winds. The eastern shore and Cape Breton saw some of the highest winds in the province with gusts clocked at more than 100 km/h.

Environmen­t Canada said Newfoundla­nd and the southeaste­rn coast of Labrador were expected to experience the storm through the day Saturday, with wind gusts projected to reach about 100 km/h in eastern parts of the province, and dangerous blizzard conditions forecast for much of central and northern Newfoundla­nd.

Social media posts indicated high tidal surges along the province’s north coast, with ocean water lapping at the edge of seashore buildings in Gander Bay, N.L. Still, some outdoor enthusiast­s expressed pleasure at the arrival of the first significan­t snowfall since December in parts of the Maritimes.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A man walks along a street in Charlottet­own on Saturday after a snow storm hit the Maritimes.
THE CANADIAN PRESS A man walks along a street in Charlottet­own on Saturday after a snow storm hit the Maritimes.

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