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1 missing in Quebec as Irene batters Eastern Canada
1 missing in Quebec as Irene batters Eastern Canada
Strong winds were battering parts of Quebec and the Atlantic provinces Monday morning, as post-tropical storm Irene made its way over Eastern Canada, drenching cities, grounding flights and leaving more than 200,000 people without power.
In Quebec, one person was missing in Yamaska, about 105 kilometres northeast of Montreal, after two cars plunged into a crevasse that was created when a road washed out Monday morning, provincial police Sgt. Benoit Richard said.
The other occupants of the cars were recovered safely, Richard said. He did not have any details about the missing person.
The violent storm, which claimed 20 lives in the U.S. over the weekend and caused about $7 billion in damages, was drenching Quebec on Monday morning, said Chris Fogarty, manager of the Canadian Hurricane Centre.
"It looks like Eastern townships and areas of Quebec got the most rainfall. There were a number of stations that had 100 millimetres of rain or more overnight," he said.
"It's pretty significant, especially when you see the scary degree of flooding in (the U.S.)," he said.
Quebec's power utility said Monday that about 215,000 residents remained without power — in Montreal's South Shore, where about 70,000 people were affected, in the Eastern Townships, and a large area around Quebec City.
Nearly 32,000 people were without electricity in New Brunswick, according to an update from that province's power utility. About 13,500 of those customers were in Fredericton.
Hydro-Quebec spokesman Louis-Olivier Batty said he couldn't give an estimate as to when power would be restored, other than to promise it would be as soon as possible.
He said hundreds of crews around the province were out working to restore service. |
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