Sandy weakens as hydro workers restore power to thousands - Action News
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Canada

Sandy weakens as hydro workers restore power to thousands

The worst of post-tropical storm Sandy may have passed for most of the central and eastern provinces, but work to clean up the damage and restore power continues amid predictions the storm's effects will still be felt for days.

Toronto woman killed by wind-blown sign; storm disrupts power in 3 provinces

Sandy's impact in Canada

12 years ago
Duration 3:06
CBC's Ioanna Roumeliotis looks at how Canada is being affected by post-tropical storm Sandy, which has killed one woman in Toronto and left thousands without power

The worst of post-tropical stormSandy may have passed for most of the central and eastern provinces, but work toclean up the damage and restore power continues amid predictionsthe storm'seffects will still be felt for days.

The massive storm systemchurned northward afterbarrellingthrough the northeastern U.S. where it causedflooding, widespread power outages and atleast 50 deathsand brought strong winds and heavy rain tosouthern Ontario, Quebec and parts of the Maritimes.

About 150,000 customers were without power in Ontario Tuesday morning, 14,000 were in the dark in Nova Scotia andHydro-Qubec said about 50,000 customers were affected.

Toronto Hydro workers overlook the damage Tuesday as power lines were down after superstorm Sandy hit the city late Monday night causing power outages. (Nathan Denette/Canadian Press)

Power outages inToronto resulted in the closure of more than a dozen schools for the day. Downed tree limbs, poles and hydro wires caused problems for the public transit system. About a quarter of theflights at Toronto's Pearson International Airport were cancelled.

Power was restored to more than 80,000 Ontario homes by early Tuesday afternoon, provincial Energy Minister Chris Bentley said, adding thatthe worst is over.

"We expect that given the progress that crews have made already that the numbers without power will come steadily downwards. But of course we are at the mercy of the weather," he said.

The strongest wind gust reported in Toronto was 91 km/h, recorded at the downtown island airport, according to the Canadian Hurricane Centre.

The most heavily affected areas were Toronto, Waterloo,Peterborough, Owen Sound and Sarnia

The strongest winds in Ontario (106 km/h) were recorded on Western Island in Georgian Bay, and in Quebec, Laval and Orlans experienced winds close to 90 km/h.

Fake Sandy photos posted online

Many Canadians living in Sandy's path havetaken to Twitter and Facebook to discuss the power outages, rattling windows and damage to yards caused by the storm. However, some fake photos of Sandy's aftermathwere being circulated on various social media networks.

The most precipitation from Sandy came in the Charlevoix region of Quebec, where 55 mm of rain fell.

Sandy brought mixed precipitation to northern Ontario, with snow, ice pellets and freezing rain around Timmins and Cochrane. Wind gusts of up to 60 km/h are expected.

The precipitation could turn into snow over parts of Ontario and western Quebec, said Environment Canada.

A wind warning also remains in place for the Quebec City region, the Canadian Hurricane Centre said.

Higher than normal water levels and pounding surf were expected along the Atlantic coast of Nova Scotia and along the St. Lawrence River. Forecasters were warning that some coastal flooding could occur in the Quebec City region.

"We're still expecting a rain event for the Maritimes," said CBC weather specialist Craig Larkins. "Parts of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick could see 50 to 70 millimetres of rain."

The rain could persist into Wednesday.

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Environment Canada's warning preparedness meteorologist Geoff Coulson said that winds from the storm were slowing, and most wind warnings have been cancelled, but the grey skies won't clear just yet.

He told The Canadian Press clouds will linger for the next few days, along with on-and-off showers,because of the slow-moving nature of the storm.

Southern Ontario borethe brunt of the storm after it moved into theregion Monday evening, with powerful winds described asmore ofa concernthan the rain.

Sarnia Mayor Mike Bradley told CBC News that waves on the community's shores reached six to nine metres overnight, the highest in recent memory.

"This is a storm reminding some people of Hurricane Hazel [in 1954], thank goodness not in the loss of life, but in the duration and anger of the storm," he told CBC News.

"No one has seen the St. Clair River look like this for at least a generation."

Woman killed by storm-blown sign in Toronto

Toronto police sit at a taped-off Staples outlet parking lot after strong storm winds caused a sign to fall, killing a woman in Toronto on Monday. (Victor Biro/Canadian Press)

Powerful gusts from the stormclaimed a life Monday night in Toronto. Police saida woman was killed by a falling sign as winds of 65 km/h whipped through the city.

The woman,in her50s,was hit in the head by a sign panel measuring about two metres widewhile walking in a commercial parking lot nearKeele Street and St. Clair Avenue. The panel was ripped off by a strong gust of wind, police said. The woman was pronounced dead at the scene.

Public Safety Minister Vic Toews had promised the military and the Canadian Coast Guard would be on standby to help deal with any havoc wreaked by Sandy.

Sandy made landfall in the U.S. Monday night, just after forecasters changes its status from hurricane to a post-tropical cyclone, but the distinction was purely technical, based on its shape and internal temperature.

"Typically, hurricanes, when they make landfall and become post-tropical [cyclones], they lose about 50 percent of their energy in the first 24 hours.So we're going to see the remnants of Sandy really diminish in intensity through day,"Environment Canada meteorologist Etienne Gregoire told CBC News.

Projected path for post-tropical storm Sandy

Source: Canadian Press, Map data: NOAA, OpenStreetMap

With files from The Canadian Press