Flooding, storm surges, highway closures as blizzard whipped through N.L. - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 06:14 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NL

Flooding, storm surges, highway closures as blizzard whipped through N.L.

Newfoundland and Labrador was battered with nasty winter weather for the third time in four days, as wind and snow hammered parts of the province Friday.

Ferries, flights and mail delivery cancelled and drivers told to stay off many roads Friday

The Holyrood RCMP tweeted this photo of a car in slushy water, apparently over an embankment. They tweeted that the driver was taken to hospital. (Twitter/Holyrood RCMP)

Storm surges and flooding werereported on the south coast of Newfoundland and in Placentia Bay as a winter storm moved through on Friday.

Wind, snow squall and blizzard warnings remained in effect for most parts of the province at 11:30 p.m.

InPlacentia, storm surges caused infrastructure damage to Veteran's Way, formerly known as Beach Road. The town sent staff and the fire department to close down the road, along withOrcanDrive. Pictures were also posted onFacebookof flooding inCoombsCove on theConnaigrePeninsula.

Route 100 near theArgentiaferry terminal was closed due to flooding.

Facebook photos show water on the streets of Coombs Cove, on the Connaigre Peninsula. (Phoebe Dominix Cox)

RCMPshut down the Trans-Canada Highway (TCH) west ofWhitbourneFriday due to zero visibility. Police saidthe road in the Chance Cove area was impassable, and atruck was stuck on the highway.

Intense winter conditions elsewhere in the province resulted in Transportation and Works issuing a warning to motorists to stay off several main roads, which continued into Friday night.

With winds gusting between 110 and 130 km/h on the Northern Peninsula, and snowfall amounts expected around 10 centimetres, Route 430 leading to St. Anthony remaineda no-go for motorists at 11:30 p.m., the department advised.

Equipment was taken of that road shortly before 6 p.m. as the department said it was too stormy to operate.

Just after 12 p.m. on Friday, a vehicle slid off the TCH eastbound near the Foxtrap Access Road and into what the RCMP in Holyrood called "deep water."

Police said the lone occupant of the vehicle was "luckily" spotted by another motorist as the vehicle left the road.

"Otherwise no one would have seen the car where it landed," theRCMPsaid in a press release Friday afternoon.

Police said first responders brought the individual to hospital before they arrived, so theage and sex of the driver have not yet been confirmed.

Waves pounded the coastline in Lord's Cove on the Burin Peninsula on Friday. (Submitted by Margaret Mary Hennebury Martin)

Marine Atlantic cancelled ferry crossings to and from Port aux Basques and said there may be delays Saturday as well, bad news for people heading home for Christmas.

Flights into Deer Lake from Halifax and Toronto were cancelled as well, and Canada Post put Corner Brook andStephenvilleunder a "red service alert" telling customers it was not safe to deliver mail.

Power outages amidst 'challenging weather'

Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro reportedpower outages and said it was working in blizzard-like conditions to restore power to La Poile, on Newfoundland's southwest coast.

N.L. Hydro was also reporting outages in theWhitbourneand Conception Bay North area Friday afternoon, andshared video of its crews working duringwhiteoutsin the Port aux Basques area.

On Change Islands, Hydro said crews arrived just before noon Friday to "challenging weather conditions," with power restoration expected by 2 p.m.

Advisories and road closures

Transportation and Works issued advisories to stay off the TCH between Stephenvilleand Port aux Basques, as well as theBurgeo Highway.

In central, most segmentsof theTCH leading to Twillingateweredown to one lane. Extreme caution wasadvised on nearly every route throughout the region.

A tractor trailer stuck in the road in the Doe Hills area near the Chance Cove turn off. The TCH was shut down west of Whitbourne on Friday due to weather in the areas of Chance Cove and Doe Hills. Drivers can detour through Chance Cove & Bellevue. (Facebook/GlenisWayne Pye)

In Labrador, advisories were out to avoid Route 510 from Red Bay to Port Hope Simpson, 514 (St. Lewis Access Road), 514 (Charlottetown and Pinsent's Arm Access Road) and 516 (Cartwright Access Road).

"It's a day to slow down, enjoy yourself and not spend your weekend in a body shop," RCMPSgt. Boyd Merrill told the St. John's Morning Show,from Holyrood.

"If you don't have good tires on your car, park it."

Snow squalls hamper visibility in Marystown, where winds are expected to gust up to 130 km/hr on Friday. (@MYSTVolFireDept/Twitter)

School openings delayed

The Newfoundland and Labrador English School district announced delayed openings in several western and central Newfoundland schools for the third time this week, with many of them converting to full-day closures as the morning progressed.

Blizzard warnings were in effect for parts of the Northern Peninsula and southern Labrador.

Snow has fallen all across the island and in Labrador on Friday morning, with high winds and blizzard warnings to boot. (Department of Transportation and Works)

At 11:30 p.m., western Labrador was still under an extreme cold warning, with a 43 C wind chill this morning. In other parts of the province, wind and blowing snow warnings have been in effect all day and night.

The Blanc Sablon-St.Barbe ferry was out for the day, while the following crossings were also stormbound:Ramea-Grey River-Burgeo, Francois-Grey River-Burgeo, Gaultois-McCallum-Hermitage, Recontre East-Bay L'Argent-Pool's Cove, South East Bight-Petite Forteand La Poile-Rose Blanche.

A wind warning is in effect for St. John's, with cancelled flights at the airport, and gusts expected to reach 140 km/halong parts of the coast.

Ryan Snoddon's live blog

Get all the latest weather updates from CBC's Ryan Snoddon in his live blog.