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PEIVideo

Blizzard cleanup proceeding slowly on P.E.I. in wake of storm

The cleanup from last night's blizzard is going to take some time after the storm dumped at least 40 centimetres of snow between midday and midnight Monday.

It will be late evening or early tomorrow morning before things will be fully clear, province says

A sidewalk plow in Charlottetown struggles to punch through the hard-packed snow drifts after Monday night's blizzard. (Brian Higgins/CBC)

The cleanup from Monday's blizzard is in full swing but will take some time after the storm dumped at least 40 centimetres of snow between midday andmidnightand poor visibility forced plows off the road overnight.

  • See a full list of cancellations onStorm Centre
  • Call in your cancellations to1-877-236-9350

With the predicted winds for Tuesday night it will be late evening or early Wednesday morning before things will be fully clear, the province said.

Schools andcivil service offices closed for the day and morning flights werecancelled at Charlottetown Airportthoughafternoon and evening flights were mostly on timeas of 7p.m. Tuesday.Mail delivery was cancelled Island-wide.

Although the province pulledplows off roads overnight because of poor visibility, some ended up helping with some dramatic emergency calls.

'Busiest night in years'

This is what downtown streets looked like first thing Tuesday morning. (Karen Mair/CBC)
Charlottetown plows were getting to work on some side streets around 9 a.m. (Tracy Lightfoot/CBC)

A spokesman for the Department of Transportation called Monday the "busiest night in years" in terms of the demand for emergency escorts.Plows assisted emergency vehicles at a major fire in Vernon River and with the delivery of three babies.

In Prince County freezing drizzle made road conditions slippery, while in Queens county blowers are pushing back snow to widen lanes. Some secondary or side roads were still not open late Tuesday afternoon, and crews will likely be working on those into Wednesday, officials said.

Flurries and blowing snow over exposed areas with winds from the north of 40 km/h gusting to 70 resulted in poor visibility insome areas Tuesday.

Sidewalk plow cleans up deep snow in Charlottetown

8 years ago
Duration 0:42
Sidewalk plow cleans up deep snow in Charlottetown

Preliminary reports show up to 40 cm snow, winds of 98 km/h

Preliminary reports from Environment Canada reported snowfall of 40 centimetres at the Charlottetown Airport, 36 centimetres in Bonshaw, P.E.I., and 20 centimetres in Borden-Carleton, P.E.I.

"There's no place to put it!" said Terry MacDonaldas he shovelled snow in Charlottetown Tuesday afternoon.

Recorded wind speeds were up to 98 km/h, as recorded at the Charlottetown Airport:

  • East Point: 93
  • Charlottetown Airport: 98
  • Summerside: 85
  • North Cape: 83
  • St. Peters: 70
  • Harrington: 82
  • Stanhope: 65

Good night for snow clearing

Winds had died down as of Tuesday evening, noted CBC P.E.I. weatherman Kevin "Boomer" Gallant, and would diminish even further by Wednesday morning.

He also predicted sunny breaks across the Island and flurries, especially in eastern P.E.I., and temperatures rising to -1 C. Snow and wind are already in the forecast for Wednesday night into Thursday, adding another 15 to 25 centimetres of snow.

Many Islanders spent Valentine's Day shovelling their way out of their homes. (Brian Higgins/CBC)
'There's no place to put it!' said Terry MacDonald (right, in yellow) as he shovelled snow in Charlottetown Tuesday. (Brian Higgins/CBC )

With files from Island Morning