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Highways reopen, but some schools closed and city traffic perilous after 2-system storm hits Sask.


Highways across Saskatchewan remain treacherous as the province digs out from a two-system storm that brought up to 30 centimetres of snow to some areas Tuesday, closing roads and schools.

“Semi trucks and trailers were getting blown off the road,” said Todd Davidson, owner of Davidson Truck and Tractor at Moosomin, 223 kilometres east of Regina.

Davidson said he pulled about 15 vehicles out of the ditch overnight Tuesday after a heavy snowfall and high winds made roads perilous.

“It was virtually impossible for them to even get traction once we got them back on the highway, it was so icy,” Davidson said.

“We’re seeing some of the worst driving conditions that you can have.”

WATCH | Saskatchewan hammered by first snowfall of the season: 

Saskatchewan hammered by first snowfall of the season

The first snowstorm of the season has hit much of Saskatchewan. Crews are working to clear the roads, while drivers across the province are trying to commute safely.

Highway 1 from Balgonie to the Manitoba border was closed overnight and re-opened Wednesday morning with travel still not recommended on the road.

Jitender Saini works at the Flying J Travel Center near Balgonie and said cars stretched for several kilometres along the highway from White City to Balgonie as he drove into work early Wednesday morning.

“It could be two or three, maybe five kilometres of lined-up trucks,” Saini said.

Roads in the city weren’t much better.

Both Regina Public Schools and Regina Catholic Schools cancelled bus service Wednesday, saying city streets were extremely dangerous.

Plainsview School and St. Nicholas School, both in the city’s northwest, were closed due to impassable roads 

Meteorologist says more storms on their way

Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) meteorologists said the storm was actually two separate systems, one hitting the province Monday and the second moving in from the southeast Tuesday morning.

Shannon Moodie, an ECCC meteorologist, said the strength of the storm system wasn’t unusual, but it came later in the season than most years.

“We typically get some monster systems moving through in the fall and we get them in the spring as well.”

A person in black winter gear walks across a snowy street.
A pedestrian navigates Saskatoon’s snowy streets Tuesday. (Trevor Bothorel/Radio-Canada)

ECCC didn’t have overnight snowfall totals Wednesday morning, but said Melfort recorded the most Tuesday with 30 centimetres. Watrous got 29 centimetres, while a swath of central Saskatchewan had up to 15.

Moodie said the current system will continue to weaken as the day goes on, but that she’s tracking another storm system that could hit the province this weekend.



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