Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Parts Of Atlantic Canada Snowed Under With Second Storm In Three Days

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Mar, 2015 01:24 PM
  • Parts Of Atlantic Canada Snowed Under With Second Storm In Three Days
HALIFAX — Blowing snow battered parts of Atlantic Canada for the second time in three days Wednesday, closing businesses and government offices and snarling transportation in the region.
 
Environment Canada meteorologist Darin Borgel said Nova Scotia bore the brunt of a slow moving low pressure system south of the province that was expected to dump up to 30 centimetres or more snow on northern and eastern areas of the province throughout the day.
 
There was potential for higher amounts with the rapidly intensifying storm, said Borgel.
 
"The further east you go the longer the snow will persist and the more snow we're expecting," he said.
 
Borgel said lower amounts were expected in southeastern New Brunswick and in P.E.I., although wind gusts of up to 70 kilometres an hour were causing snow drifts and visibility problems throughout the region.
 
"We are looking at a lot of blowing and drifting snow as an issue in a lot of areas well into Thursday," he said.
 
The storm closed universities, colleges and all government offices in Nova Scotia.
 
The arrivals and departure board at the Halifax Stanfield International Airport was a sea of red as most flights were cancelled or delayed. By mid-morning, transit officials in Halifax decided to keep city buses off the streets for the remainder of the day.
 
Police in Halifax and Cape Breton asked motorists to stay off the roads as well because of poor visibility and to allow snowplow drivers to do their jobs.
 
Schools were also closed for the day in southeastern New Brunswick and in parts of central and western Newfoundland.
 
The storm arrived on the heels of another that blasted the region Sunday, dumping more than 40 centimetres of snow in many areas.
 
Borgel said people were beginning to feel as if they are under a deluge as they shovel more snow.
 
"The snowbanks are pretty high in almost all of the Maritimes right now. I think people don't know where they are going to put it now."

MORE National ARTICLES

TransCanada CEO says EPA's call for further Keystone XL review a delay tactic

TransCanada CEO says EPA's call for further Keystone XL review a delay tactic
TORONTO — TransCanada's chief executive says suggestions that the environmental impacts of the Keystone XL pipeline be revisited in light of lower crude prices is merely a tactic to delay the project.

TransCanada CEO says EPA's call for further Keystone XL review a delay tactic

Company's Offices Searched As Part Of Investigation Into B.C. Mine Disaster

Company's Offices Searched As Part Of Investigation Into B.C. Mine Disaster
VANCOUVER — The B.C. Conservation Service has searched two offices of the company that owns the Mount Polley mine as part of an investigation into a tailings pond spill that gushed millions of cubic metres of wastewater into streams and rivers.

Company's Offices Searched As Part Of Investigation Into B.C. Mine Disaster

Medieval Religious Document From 1245 Now In UBC Library Collection

Medieval Religious Document From 1245 Now In UBC Library Collection
VANCOUVER — The University of British Columbia has obtained a 770-year-old religious document that its professors say will be an invaluable resource for students and teachers.

Medieval Religious Document From 1245 Now In UBC Library Collection

Club Of 1: B.C. Finance Minister Singles Out Province For Balanced Budget

Club Of 1: B.C. Finance Minister Singles Out Province For Balanced Budget
VANCOUVER — British Columbia is preparing to enter an exclusive economic club by bucking a trend of deficit budgets nationwide, says the province's finance minister.

Club Of 1: B.C. Finance Minister Singles Out Province For Balanced Budget

Baird's exit creates hole at home, abroad at crucial time for both

Baird's exit creates hole at home, abroad at crucial time for both
OTTAWA — One of Stephen Harper's most experienced ministers resigned his plum foreign affairs post Tuesday, leaving a void around the Conservative cabinet table at a critical juncture in both domestic and international affairs.

Baird's exit creates hole at home, abroad at crucial time for both

Ghomeshi lawyer appears in Toronto court, next hearing on Feb. 26

Ghomeshi lawyer appears in Toronto court, next hearing on Feb. 26
TORONTO — Lawyers for Jian Ghomeshi appeared briefly in a Toronto courtroom this morning to set a new date in his headline-grabbing sexual assault case.

Ghomeshi lawyer appears in Toronto court, next hearing on Feb. 26