Wednesday, June 17, 2026
ADVT 
National

Winter Storm Dumps Snow In Maritimes For Second Time In Three Days

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Dec, 2015 01:29 PM
    HALIFAX — Parts of the Maritimes are digging out for the second time in three days as a winter storm sweeps through parts of the region.
     
    Environment Canada meteorologist Barrie MacKinnon says a weather system near Cape Cod is responsible for the storm which was expected to bring up to 25 centimetres of snow to much of mainland Nova Scotia and southeastern New Brunswick by the end of the day Tuesday.
     
    MacKinnon says up to 15 centimetres of snow was expected for northern New Brunswick, while lighter amounts of up to 10 centimetres were forecast for Prince Edward Island and Cape Breton.
     
    The snowfall led to several flight delays at Halifax Stanfield International Airport and to event cancellations in some parts of the region.
     
     
    RCMP in Nova Scotia say the conditions also caused more than a dozen traffic accidents across the province.
     
    The most serious was a head-on collision around 2 p.m. on Highway 104 near French River, N.S., that sent a man and a woman to hospital with serious but non-life threatening injuries.
     
    The latest snowfall follows a storm on Sunday that dumped up to 18 centimetres across areas of the Maritime provinces.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Boy Writes 'I'm Sorry' To Library For Damaging Book While Falling Asleep Reading

    Boy Writes 'I'm Sorry' To Library For Damaging Book While Falling Asleep Reading
    A young reader looking to atone for tearing a borrowed comic book has won over Toronto library staff — and many others online — with a handwritten apology note.

    Boy Writes 'I'm Sorry' To Library For Damaging Book While Falling Asleep Reading

    Wildfire In B.C.'s Southeast Destroys 30 Homes, Forces Hundreds To Evacuate

    Wildfire In B.C.'s Southeast Destroys 30 Homes, Forces Hundreds To Evacuate
    Residents in southeastern British Columbia are regrouping from an immense and fast-spreading wildfire that has so far wiped out 30 homes and forced hundreds to flee with little more than the clothes on their backs.

    Wildfire In B.C.'s Southeast Destroys 30 Homes, Forces Hundreds To Evacuate

    Canadian Association Of Chiefs Of Police In Quebec City To Discuss Extremism

    Canadian Association Of Chiefs Of Police In Quebec City To Discuss Extremism
    QUEBEC — The Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police is calling on the public for help in detecting people who are becoming radicalized.

    Canadian Association Of Chiefs Of Police In Quebec City To Discuss Extremism

    Feds Again Put Off Gun-marking Regulations Aimed At Helping Police Trace Weapons

    Feds Again Put Off Gun-marking Regulations Aimed At Helping Police Trace Weapons
    OTTAWA — The federal government is delaying implementation of regulations intended to help police trace crime guns — the seventh time it has put off the measures.

    Feds Again Put Off Gun-marking Regulations Aimed At Helping Police Trace Weapons

    Under Fire Over Duffy, Harper Clings To Conservative Campaign Message

    The Conservative leader is stressing the latter at a stop in Fredericton, N.B., where he is promising to add 6,000 people to bolster the reserve ranks of the Canadian Forces reserves.

    Under Fire Over Duffy, Harper Clings To Conservative Campaign Message

    The Plan For Duffy's Fake Repayment Dissected In Court

    The Plan For Duffy's Fake Repayment Dissected In Court
    Was Mike Duffy railroaded by a group of Stephen Harper's aides into telling the public he would repay his Senate expenses, or was Duffy the one shaking down the PMO?

    The Plan For Duffy's Fake Repayment Dissected In Court