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Alberta clipper slams Saskatchewan, causing widespread damage

An Alberta clipper storm system walloped southern and central Saskatchewan Jan. 13-14, with roads from North of Maidstone, then Kindersley, Regina, Weyburn and Moosomin, as the storm rolled through the province in a southeasterly direction.

An Alberta clipper storm system walloped southern and central Saskatchewan Jan. 13-14, with roads from North of Maidstone, then Kindersley, Regina, Weyburn and Moosomin, as the storm rolled through the province in a southeasterly direction.

High winds caused damage all over. On Facebook one could find photos of roofs ripped off in Regina, Weyburn and Boundary Dam, south of Estevan. Smashed empty grain bins, torn shingles, missing soffits, fallen trees, damaged campers were common throughout the affected region, which was really much of southern Saskatchewan.

Terri Lang, Saskatchewan’s meteorologist with Environment and Climate Change Canada, said from Saskatoon on Thursday afternoon, “It was an Alberta Clipper; fairly typical of how they act, with the exception that we usually get a big gush of cold air behind, but we didn't have at this time around. But it had sort of a warm air ahead of it, freezing rain, it rained even, and then we got the snow in behind and then really, really strong winds.”

She pointed out even lightning was detected in the southwest. 

She explained, “They’re called clippers because they move very quickly. They form in Alberta. And off they go quickly, through this one actually did damage on the B.C. coast first, then it hit Alberta, did damage there and then came through Saskatchewan so now it's just so on its way out of Manitoba.”

It was large enough to affect an area from La Ronge down to the U.S. border, she said. “It was huge. It covered most of Saskatchewan.

The strongest wind gusts were felt at Bratt’s Lake, a weather station north of Regina, where wind gusts reached 143 kilometres per hour. “That puts it the EF1 scale of tornadic winds,” she said.

Peak wind gusts in other areas, in kilometres per hour, were: Yellowgrass, 133; Elbow, 122; Mankota, 120; Estevan, 120 (sensor went off line during the peak of the storm); Moose Jaw, 119 (sensor went off line during the peak of the storm); Eastend Cypress, 111; Swift Current, 109; Rockglen, 106 (sensor went off line during the peak of the storm); Rosetown, 104; Maple Creek, 104; Weyburn, 102 (sensor went off line during the peak of the storm); Indian Head, 102; Val Marie, 102; Leader, 100; and Kindersley, 100.

A number of warm temperature records were broken across Saskatchewan earlier on Wednesday. Record temperatures were recorded in the areas of Outlook, Regina, Saskatoon, Swift Current, Uranium City, Watrous, Weyburn, Wynyard and Yorkton.

According to Environment and Climate Change Chanda, “Rain and freezing rain ahead of the system quickly changed to snow and blowing snow as a cold front behind the system advanced eastward. With the passage of the cold front widespread winds in excess of 100 kilometres per hour were reported, leading to power outages and reports of structural and tree damage across the province. When combined with falling snow, these winds produced whiteout conditions resulting in a number of highway closures.”

Lang pointed out, “There were a number of people trapped in their cars through western Saskatchewan yesterday evening, because the winds hit, and it was snowing so hard, that people couldn’t see to drive. Some of them were in their cars for four to six hours, which is a very scary situation.”

A large swath of highways were closed as the storm progressed across Saskatchewan as a result.

By noon on Thursday, Jan. 14, all highways had re-opened except for Highway 1, from Mortlach to Chaplin, according to Highways Hotline. The Ministry of Highways posted several photos of semis in the ditch, noting, “A portion of Hwy 1 is still closed. There are many semis in the ditch and have snow accumulated around them. Once the semis are removed we will be able to work on clearing the snow and opening up the road. We do not have an ETA (estimated time of arrival) at this time, but be sure to check https://hotline.gov.sk.ca/mobile/ as any new information will be posted. Although portions of Hwy 1 are reopening, they are still travel no recommended due to icy conditions.”

By Thursday morning, SaskTel was reporting service outages for landlines at Beechy, Herschel, Plenty and Dodsland. Wireless sites around Saskatoon including Lucky Lake, Warman, Meacham, Danielson were without service. Moose Jaw, Estevan and Weyburn saw some MaxTV and internet services down.

SaskPower said its crews are working hard to restore power after extreme winds and snow caused outages across much of Saskatchewan Wednesday and overnight.

“Crews were able to restore power to some customers yesterday evening, however in many cases roads were impassable and weather conditions were too severe for crews to work safely, meaning repairs had to begin this morning,” SaskPower said in a release.

“Nothing is more important than the safety of our customers and our employees,” said SaskPower president and CEO Mike Marsh. “We are doing everything we can to get the lights back on as quickly as possible without jeopardizing the safety of our crews.”

At the time of their release on Thursday morning, SaskPower was aware of approximately 80,000 customers currently without power in more than 100 communities throughout the province.

When conducting repairs SaskPower prioritizes restoring power to essential services such as medical facilities, care homes, and police and fire stations, and then focuses on restoring power to as many customers as possible as quickly as possible. SaskPower said it is working closely with provincial and municipal agencies during the storm response.

“We understand outages are frustrating, and we appreciate your patience as we continue to identify issues and conduct repairs,” Marsh said.

SaskPower also reminded customers never to operate a generator in a house, garage or enclosed building. Doing so will create the risk of carbon monoxide poisoning.