Ice storms and power outages | “Critical infrastructures are not affected”, assures Montreal

Montreal is busy cleaning up the damage caused by Wednesday’s ice storm, but its critical infrastructure “is not affected,” the city said Thursday.


The municipal teams are first working to clear the passageways for emergency vehicles, said Mayor Valérie Plante, at a press briefing in the Saint-Michel district with the Prime Minister of Canada, Justin Trudeau.

“The priority is the main streets first, then the secondary streets and, at the very end, the parks,” said Ms.me Plant.

His own home is without electricity, said Mr.me Plant. She also announced the opening of all cultural centers and libraries that always have power in order to provide heated places of refuge for citizens.

The Montreal Fire Department (SIM) is preparing to open shelters if needed, especially for those who still will not have electricity overnight from Friday to Saturday. “This morning, we switched to intervention mode, because the forecast for the return of electricity is longer than what we expected,” said fire chief Robert Liebmann. The shelters “will be on the entire territory of the agglomeration of Montreal. It will be according to the needs, we are currently analyzing which are the best places. »

More broadly, “critical infrastructures are not affected”, explained Mr. Liebmann. “They are all powered by generators or have electricity. So there is no major risk at this level. »

The mayor called for caution: Montrealers should stay home on Thursday and, above all, avoid going to parks. “It can fall, it’s still very unstable,” she said. Mr. Liebmann, added that the victims must absolutely avoid using combustion devices (propane, for example) inside.

Mme Plante asked Montrealers who can safely move their cars to do so in order to give space to cleaning crews. No ticket will be imposed on them, she said.

“Along with sadness, there is this observation that we have been making for a long time, but which is increasingly obvious: climate change is not a figment of the imagination. It’s a reality that strikes ever more often and harder,” added Valérie Plante.


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