-
Father of drowned teen urges secondary school swimming lessons - 6 mins ago
-
College Football Week 12 Best Upset Picks: BYU on Upset Alert vs. Kansas? - 15 mins ago
-
Gilberto Ramirez vs. Chris Billam-Smith : Live Updates & Results - 17 mins ago
-
Peru signs key FTA with Hong Kong — MercoPress - 19 mins ago
-
South Yorkshire dog owners warned after 13 attacks in 48 hours - 20 mins ago
-
Malcolm X’s family sues FBI, CIA and NYPD over his murder - 27 mins ago
-
Redondo Beach man arrested in connection with suspicious bag found at courthouse - 28 mins ago
-
Matt Gaetz Faces ‘Problems Upon Problems’ During Nomination: Ex-Prosecutor - 29 mins ago
-
MLS awards winners, finalists: Lionel Messi, Luis Suarez up for MVP; Wilfried Nancy to finally win top coach? - 32 mins ago
-
Sheinbaum not happy with Moddy’s lowering Mexico’s grading — MercoPress - 34 mins ago
Heavy, wet snow leads to power outages, downed trees in Calgary – Calgary
Several Calgary communities were dealing with power outages Tuesday morning, with “adverse weather conditions” to blame, according to Enmax.
Calgary and surrounding areas woke up to a fresh blanket of heavy, wet snow on Tuesday.
Power provider Enmax said adverse weather conditions were the cause of outages in several southeast Calgary neighbourhoods, with more than 1,000 customers affected.
Other outages occurred in all other quadrants of the city Tuesday, with those blackouts still under investigation as of 7:40 a.m.
Trees in areas of the city were also broken, due to the weight of the wet snow.
The precipitation started Monday night as rain and turned to snow. Snow was no longer falling in the city Tuesday morning.
Breaking news from Canada and around the world
sent to your email, as it happens.
Calgary remained under a special weather statement on Tuesday morning, with “significant snowfall” expected this week, according to Environment and Climate Change Canada.
Snow in southwestern Alberta is expected to taper off Tuesday morning, but begin again in along the foothills Tuesday evening and spread to the east.
Global Calgary chief meteorologist Tiffany Lizée said 20 to 30 centimetres of snow had fallen in the Bragg Creek and Canmore areas.
Want your weather on the go? Download the Global News Skytracker weather app for iOS and Android.
© 2024 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
Source link