National Post

Storm leaves trail of destructio­n across Quebec

Officials confirm microburst hit town of Lachute

- Andy Riga With files from Safia Ahmad and The Canadian Press Montreal Gazette

The power is returning and most streets have reopened, but it will take weeks to clear the debris and decades for a Montreal park to return to its leafy glory.

On Wednesday, residents of blacked-out streets awoke to the buzz of chainsaws in the west-end neighbourh­ood of Notre- Dame- de- Grâce ( N. D. G.) as Hydro- Québec crews, city workers and private tree- trimmers cleaned up and made repairs after Tuesday’s brief but powerful storm left a trail of destructio­n in its wake.

The “microburst,” which witnesses say lasted from 30 seconds to two or three minutes, devastated trees, which in turned cut power lines and damaged homes and cars over a three- kilometre area. There were no reports of serious injuries.

While as capable as a tornado to create damage, a microburst is a sudden and powerful downdraft that usually occurs during severe thundersto­rms.

N. D. G. was the hardest hit part of Montreal, but several other areas were also affected, including Côte-St-Luc and Lachine.

Environmen­t Canada said winds in N.D.G. reached 120 kilometres an hour during the microburst.

Russell Copeman, mayor of t he Côte-des- NeigesNotr­e-Dame- de- Grâce borough, said about 50 to 100 trees — some of them more than 100 years old — were severely damaged. In the affected area, the damage was as extensive or worse than the 1998 ice storm, he added.

By the end of Wednesday, all N. D. G. streets were expected to be reopened, with power restored to the vast majority of homes, he said. However, it will take several weeks to clear the branches and tree trunks that line many side streets.

Workers will go through the affected area again in the coming weeks looking for weakened or damaged branches and trees that could fall in a windstorm, Copeman said.

The storm devastated the borough’s biggest park — N. D.G. Park. Many trees, some of which have shaded playing children, dog walkers and picnickers for decades, were snapped like twigs by the force of the storm.

Copeman said the park will be closed for several days while workers clear downed trees. After that, city experts will take a closer look to see which trees can be saved and which must be felled.

“Then we’ ll start looking at replanting trees, but even if we plant fast-growing trees, it’s going to be decades before the park comes back to the way it was,” Copeman said.

On Wednesday, in sections of the park where damaged trees were close to sidewalks, workers were cutting branches and feeding them to a wood chipper, as crowds of onlookers took photos.

Brenda Keesal, a nearby resident, was surveying the damage at the park. She watched the storm from a café on Tuesday.

“All of a sudden everything went horizontal — the gusts of wind were so strong, I couldn’t keep the heavy wooden door closed. It kept whooshing open.”

In the café, “there was a moment of complete chaos and fear. Torrential rain, explosive wind.”

She said a woman suffered a bad cut when flying glass hit her arm. A veterinari­an from a nearby clinic helped clean the wound, but “there was a lot of blood and she needed major stitches,” Keesal said.

A series of violent storms swept across Quebec on Tuesday. In Lachute, 80 kilometres northwest of Montreal, a tornado touched down.

Meteorolog­ist Amelie Bertrand said Wednesday a team dispatched to Lachute confirmed an EF-1 tornado with winds reaching about 175 km/h struck in the town. Lachute officials said the tornado hit at about 6: 15 p. m., damaging about 150 residences, including around 10 that are now uninhabita­ble. There were no serious injuries.

The tornado was the sixth reported so far this year in Quebec.

Hydro- Quebec said about 1 1 5, 000 c ustomers l ost power at the peak of the severe weather and that some 12,000 remained without electricit­y as of late Wednesday afternoon.

The majority of customers were expected to be restored by the end of day as 250 crews worked around the clock, but the utility warned it could take a bit longer in some cases.

Hydro- Quebec spokesman Serge Abregel said one street in N. D.G. saw half its trees crash to the ground as well as having four hydro poles knocked down, wires and all.

 ??  ?? CHRISTINNE MUSCHI / POSTMEDIA NEWS Hydro- Quebec works to restore power to residents on Madison Avenue in Notre-Dame- de- Grâce (N.D.G.).
CHRISTINNE MUSCHI / POSTMEDIA NEWS Hydro- Quebec works to restore power to residents on Madison Avenue in Notre-Dame- de- Grâce (N.D.G.).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada