Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

Teddy expected to propel storm surge

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Sep, 2020 07:36 PM
  • Teddy expected to propel storm surge

Residents of Halifax and Nova Scotia's eastern shore were warned Tuesday to stay away from the coastline as hurricane Teddy churned its way toward Atlantic Canada, pushing a storm surge ahead of its swirling winds.

By early afternoon, the immense Category 2 hurricane — measuring about 1,000 kilometres across — was roughly 450 kilometres south of Nova Scotia, and it was picking up speed. Travelling northward at 45 kilometres per hour, the storm's maximum sustained winds were clocked at 160 km/h.

"It's a very large and powerful storm," Bob Robichaud, meteorologist with the Canadian Hurricane Centre in Halifax, said Tuesday.

Chuck Porter, the minister responsible for Nova Scotia's Emergency Management Office, told reporters his biggest concern was the threat of storm surges accompanied by 10-metre waves.

"I know people are attracted to the shoreline and they love to watch the waves," Porter said Tuesday. "I want to caution folks: please stay back. If you get trapped out there, somebody has to come and try to rescue you, putting people in jeopardy unnecessarily."

Robichaud said the storm surge along the eastern shore will come in two waves — as high tide approaches late Tuesday and again when daylight breaks on Wednesday, as Teddy's centre moves over the province.

"Over the last number of years, we've lost a lot of people who have gone to the coast to watch those waves," Robichaud said. "That's what we need to avoid with this particular storm."

Localized flooding is expected as winds along the coast are forecast to reach 90 km/h Tuesday and more than 100 km/h on Wednesday morning.

Rainfall could exceed 50 millimetres across the province and in P.E.I., with some areas on the left side of the storm getting as much as 100 millimetres over the next two days.

At the Sheet Harbour Discount convenience store, about 115 kilometres east of Halifax, manager Karen Malay said plenty of her customers were stocking up on essentials.

"They're buying extra chips and pop, cigarettes, flashlights and batteries," Malay said. "And they're getting extra lottery tickets for the next couple of draws."

As well, Malay said customers were telling her that one of the local service stations had run out of gasoline — which was confirmed by the station manager.

Meanwhile, it was quiet down the road at the Church Point Variety Store, where the manager said it was business as usual. "Everybody's used to it," she said, declining to give her name. "They're just going with the flow."

By noon, the store still had a full supply of potato chips, which is unusual because Nova Scotians are known for quickly stocking up on "storm chips" in advance of nasty weather.

Officials in Halifax suspended the city's harbour ferry service at 2:30 p.m. after issuing a plea for residents to secure patio furniture, flower pots, toys, garbage containers and any debris "that high winds could pick up." Curbside garbage collection was also cancelled for Wednesday.

Earlier in the day, one of Teddy's outer bands swept over Nova Scotia brining heavy rain across the province. The weather deteriorated throughout the day.

Weather warnings were in effect for virtually all of Atlantic Canada.

Though Teddy will likely transition to a post-tropical storm as it approaches the Maritimes, it is expected to maintain much of its strength.

Mark Sidebottom, chief operating officer for Nova Scotia Power, said the privately owned utility had 300 crews standing by to handle power outages. Sidebottom said 170 of those crews had recently arrived in Nova Scotia from provinces within the Atlantic region.

Paul Mason, executive director of Nova Scotia's Emergency Management Office, said comfort stations set up for those fleeing the storm will comply with public health rules regarding physical distancing. He said larger facilities would be used or more stations would be opened to handle the load.

The storm is expected to track over eastern Nova Scotia, the eastern half of Prince Edward Island and southwestern Newfoundland.

Robichaud said residents of southwestern Newfoundland should also watch for a storm surge on Wednesday, which could lead to localized flooding. He said, however, Teddy does not pose much of a threat to the area in terms of wind or rain.

Marine Atlantic, the Crown corporation that operates the ferry service linking Nova Scotia with Newfoundland, cancelled all sailings across the Cabot Strait on Tuesday night and all day Wednesday.

MORE National ARTICLES

Mass shooting review 'insufficient': families

Mass shooting review 'insufficient': families
Ottawa and Nova Scotia have announced a review of the April mass shooting that left 22 people and the gunman dead, but the process drew criticism from victims' relatives as being too secretive and lacking the necessary legal powers.

Mass shooting review 'insufficient': families

Let our students in, U.S. parents urge Canada

Let our students in, U.S. parents urge Canada
Parents of students in the United States who hoped to begin their university studies in Canada this fall are frantically trying to convince the federal government to relax rules that make it next to impossible for their kids to enter the country.

Let our students in, U.S. parents urge Canada

Health officials sorry over man's drowning death

Health officials sorry over man's drowning death
A young man pleaded for help as he was being led out of a hospital by security before taking his own life in a lake on the Saskatchewan legislature grounds.

Health officials sorry over man's drowning death

Tories, NDP ask for new probe of Morneau, WE

Tories, NDP ask for new probe of Morneau, WE
Opposition parties are asking the federal ethics watchdog to widen his probe of Bill Morneau regarding the WE organization as the finance minister continues to face calls for his resignation.

Tories, NDP ask for new probe of Morneau, WE

Feds, Alberta sign child-care deal

Feds, Alberta sign child-care deal
For Alberta, the one-year deal will mean more than $45 million this fiscal year to create new licensed child-care spaces through capital and program grants and subsidies for more lower-income families.

Feds, Alberta sign child-care deal

Search for N.S. fugitive into third day

Search for N.S. fugitive into third day
RCMP say they continue to get reports of sightings of Tobias Charles Doucette, the fugitive accused of stabbing a police sergeant, assaulting a woman and injuring a police dog, as the manhunt for him enters its third day.

Search for N.S. fugitive into third day