March 27, 2014 by THE CANADIAN PRESS
HALIFAX – Thousands of people in Atlantic Canada were without power early Thursday after a powerful spring storm brought crippling winds and heavy snowfall to the region Wednesday.
Howling winds pulled down power lines across the Maritimes, leaving about 16,000 Nova Scotians in the dark at one point.
Outages also affected about 2,400 customers in southern New Brunswick as well as customers across P.E.I.
In many areas of the region, roads were snow-covered and slippery with the Trans-Canada Highway between Truro and Amherst in Nova Scotia closed until early in the day.
The RCMP in P.E.I. asked drivers to stay at home because of high winds of up to 100 kilometres an hour as road crews worked to clear highways. The Mounties said some roads remained impassable Thursday morning.
Most schools and government offices were closed in the Maritimes on Wednesday, with schools in parts of Nova Scotia and P.E.I. shuttered again Thursday. Some government offices delayed their openings.
Charlottetown’s Queen Elizabeth Hospital cancelled all non-emergency surgeries Thursday and limited clinic appointments.
Some flights were also cancelled Thursday in Halifax and St. John’s, N.L., a day after public transit services were cancelled throughout the region. The Confederation Bridge linking P.E.I. and New Brunswick was closed to traffic.
Gusts reached 172 kilometres per hour in parts of Cape Breton, where the Canso causeway was closed, and 185 kilometres per hour at Wreckhouse in western Newfoundland.
In Nova Scotia, the community of Amherst received the most snow at 40 centimetres, while Halifax reported only 16 centimetres and Charlottetown received 28 centimetres.
Today’s Front Page @chronicleherald #print #newspaper pic.twitter.com/sFCVm5ZL6z
— Nadine Fownes (@LobstahChowdah) March 27, 2014
Storm damage at a #Halifax apartment building at 59 Main Ave., photo by @CH_shutterbug http://t.co/PawUiZ0jaD pic.twitter.com/JpLeVJe8q9
— The Chronicle Herald (@chronicleherald) March 27, 2014
1415Z #GOES13 #visible #satellite image of the #hurricane force low in Western #Atlantic. pic.twitter.com/9KJMeDixIR
— NWS OPC (@NWSOPC) March 26, 2014
The nor’easter by the numbers: http://t.co/kAJPzOK6OQ #atlstorm pic.twitter.com/nrxaOgZxQ7
— The Weather Network (@weathernetwork) March 27, 2014
If you’re not watching our #atlstorm livestream, you’re missing crazy moments like this: http://t.co/mdkLIhTgFB
— The Weather Network (@weathernetwork) March 26, 2014
Full @NASA Modis image of #atlstorm just in: pic.twitter.com/p8I3us76l0
— Chris Dolce (@chrisdolcewx) March 26, 2014
Monster nor’easter. #atlstorm #blizzard (Source: http://t.co/nj5CZA7hTn) pic.twitter.com/YY1fPzHCgd
— The Weather Channel (@weatherchannel) March 26, 2014
@cstclair1 @weathernetwork This photo is from 12 noon, 1 and 2 PM today in Emyvale PEI pic.twitter.com/brhG1lrchj
— Leonard Bannister (@theeastcoastboy) March 26, 2014
BREAKING: 114-mph wind gust just reported at #Wreckhouse, Newfoundland at 5:20pm EDT. #blizzard #atlstorm pic.twitter.com/WOFhPvy8wM
— The Weather Channel (@weatherchannel) March 26, 2014
Have your say: