Ottawa

Cleanup progressing after storm passes through eastern Ontario

The city of Ottawa has lifted its declaration of a "significant weather event" in the aftermath of a weekend storm that upended many people's holiday travel plans and left thousands without power.

Crews still working to restore power, tow abandoned vehicles

A man walks a dog on a snowy road by hydro equipment.
A man walks his dog past Hydro Ottawa utility vehicles responding to power outages in parts of Ottawa's Golden Triangle neighbourhood while a winter storm warning was in effect on Friday Dec. 23, 2022. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

The city of Ottawa has lifted its declaration of a "significant weather event" in the aftermath of a weekend storm that upended many people's holiday travel plans and left thousands without power.

The city lifted the rare designation shortly after 12 p.m. Monday after it was in place since Thursday.

"Recreation and cultural facilities with scheduled activities and rentals have been open since December 24 on their holiday schedules," a city spokesperson said in an email.

Power being restored across the province

At the peak, about 75,000 people were affected by power outages in the province, Hydro One spokesperson Tiziana Baccega Rosa told CBC's Ottawa Morning Tuesday. She added that the storm presented a unique challenge when compared with previous storms.

"If you look at the derecho, there was a start time and there was a clear end time," she said. "This sort of sat on us for a few days."

Baccega Rosa said crews have restored power to over 442,000 customers in the province, often working directly behind city snowplows. She estimated that fewer than 12,000 customers remain without power. 

Highways, roadways mostly cleared

Highways were impassable during the storm in some counties in eastern Ontario, said acting OPP Sgt. Erin Cranton.

"[Emergency crews] had almost 200 calls for service as a result of the storm," Cranton said, and that hazardous conditions, including 10-foot-high snow drifts in Prince Edward County, made it difficult to reach them.

Most townships in eastern Ontario had vehicles abandoned along major highways and roadways, she said.

A blue car is flipped over in a median with yellow tape wrapped around its tires.
A blue car sits flipped over in a median along the 401 near Prince Edward County. (Kate Adach/CBC)

"Those vehicles have been mostly removed throughout last 24 hours," she said. "But in some areas, there are still vehicles that need to be towed."

Sections of the 401 that were closed during the storm have now been reopened.

Crews in Ottawa are continuing to work to maintain sidewalks, roads and bike lanes, the city said in a release.

"Please exercise caution when using City sidewalks, roads and the winter cycling network," the release said.

Warmer weather

Environment and Climate Change Canada is forecasting periods of snow Tuesday night and Wednesday morning and a risk of freezing drizzle in the afternoon.

Temperatures above freezing are expected for the rest of the week.