120
km/h winds, record warmth bring thaw to Edmonton
Wind
warning in effect as strong gusts cause power outages, transportation
issues
CBC,
15
January, 2014
Record
winds and temperatures blanketed central Alberta this morning as
Environment Canada issued wind warnings of 100 km/h and higher.
Wind
speeds up to 70 km/h were been reported in downtown Edmonton, while
the international airport recorded wind gusts at 120 km/h, reports
CBC meteorologist Stephanie Barsby.
The
winds forced Edmonton Transit to shut down the LRT from Century Park
to South Campus, as about 15 crossing arms were damaged and others
were blowing too close to power lines. Passengers were taken by bus
to LRT stops
"It
was decided that it was no longer safe for operations down there,"
said John Wollenzin, supervisor of LRT operations.
"So
we suspended operations and had Epcor come in and bring extra crews
to clean up the mess to get everything safe again."
The
wind also tore roofs and signs off buildings. Iain Scott had his
truck damaged by a roof that blew off Skyco Machine Ltd. in south
Edmonton.
"The
roof ripped off of Skyco there and it hit a bunch of vehicles and it
ended up doing a 360 in the air and it came back and hit my truck and
bounced off," he said.
Service
was restored by 3 p.m., although trains were running on a reduced
schedule.
The
previous strongest sustained wind speed for January in downtown
Edmonton was 68 km/h in 1959. Wind gusts hit 114 km/h in 1972.
In
some rural areas the winds have knocked down power lines and power
poles across roadways.
Semi
rollover closes highway
Shortly
after RCMP issued a wind advisory for travel on the QE II south of
Edmonton between Wetaskiwin and Red Deer, a southbound semi-truck
rolled near the Millet overpass at about 8 a.m. MT, forcing police to
reroute traffic.
The
strong winds contributed to one death about 20 kilometres west of
Westlock.
A
vehicle was blown into a ditch along Highway 44. The driver got out
of the vehicle and was struck and killed by a second vehicle that was
blown into the ditch.
While
the winds are expected to continue into the afternoon, temperatures
will fall from a record 9.2 C, which smashed the old daytime high
record of 7.2 C set back in 1965, to near the zero mark.
Barsby
said the unusual wind cannot be termed a Chinook, the warm, dry
snow-clearing winds that often sweep through southern Alberta.
"These
are not down-sloping winds and we are too far away from the
mountains," she said. "This system is related. We have a
severe pressure gradient and the wind is mixing down warm air aloft."
The
winds are pushing east from west and north-central Alberta through
most of central Alberta
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