High winds, snow and rain sweep across P.E.I. Wednesday

The snow began to ease in the Charlottetown area by midday Wednesday, but high winds and rain are expected to continue into the evening. (Laura Meader/CBC - image credit)
The snow began to ease in the Charlottetown area by midday Wednesday, but high winds and rain are expected to continue into the evening. (Laura Meader/CBC - image credit)

The Confederation Bridge had reopened to all but high-sided vehicles Wednesday evening after a winter storm swept across the province, leaving thousands without power.

The storm forced the closure of the bridge to all traffic around noon Wednesday and it reopened with restrictions just after 5 p.m. The restrictions apply to high-sided vehicles, including vehicles towing trailers, trucks, buses and tractor trailers.

Maritime Electric reported as many as 5,500 customers were without power through the day.

The storm brought strong winds to the Island, with bridge officials recording gusts as high as 125 km/h over the Northumberland Strait early in the afternoon.

Environment Canada issued a wind warning for the entire province, but that ended Wednesday evening as the gusts dwindled.

RCMP urged drivers to be cautious on the roads after the messy mix of precipitation. Snow began falling around mid-morning and changed to rain in the afternoon.

Schools across the province, including UPEI and Holland College, closed Wednesday, as did provincial government offices in Prince County.

Schools in New Brunswick and dozens more in Nova Scotia were also closed for the day.

The snow causing whiteout conditions and messy roads across P.E.I. on Wednesday is set to turn to rain by the afternoon.
The snow causing whiteout conditions and messy roads across P.E.I. on Wednesday is set to turn to rain by the afternoon.

The snow caused whiteout conditions across P.E.I. Wednesday morning before turning to rain in the afternoon. (Cody MacKay/CBC)

CBC P.E.I. meteorologist Jay Scotland said the mix of snow, freezing rain and rain impacted travel conditions, and a strong southeasterly wind was expected to continue into the early evening hours.

"The Island has seen peak gusts in the 70 to 100 km/h range, and this strong southeast wind will persist for the next few hours, before easing later this evening," Scotland said. "Until the wind subsides, additional outages are possible. Also, after a messy mix of snow, freezing rain, ice-pellets and now rain, road conditions are far from ideal, so please be cautious."

(Jay Scotland/CBC)

Maritime Electric's outage map reported just under 1,000 customers without power as of 8 p.m. Wednesday.

The utility's spokesperson, Kim Griffin, said most of the outages were related to heavy snow on tree branches causing downed lines.

"Lots of customers are even more concerned post-Fiona in terms of any outages … so our crews are very sensitive to that and understand and are still trying to work as hard as they can to get the power back on," she said.

"It is reduced visibility right now, it's harder to find some of those trees … but we're going to keep our contact centre open into the evening to help our customers if they need us, and our crews are staying out to restore power."

Customers can reach the contact centre at 1-800-670-1012.