“Quiet” Ice storm hits the Land o'
LakesBy Jeff Green
 Skootamatta Lake Road, north of Cloyne.
“If this were happening in Napanee or
Kingston, it would be all over the news, but since it is only out
here, you don't hear anything about it.”
That's how Addington Highlands Reeve
Henry Hogg describes the ice storm on December 26 that caused havoc
on the roads and power outages in the region north and east of
Northbrook, extending to Plevna, Cloyne, Ompah and Denbigh.
Hydro workers were out in force
throughout the holidays, trudging through the snow and ice to remove
trees that had fallen over hydro lines. For many residents the power
returned for a few hours or days, only to go off again as new trees
came down and the lines went down again.
“One fortunate thing about the damage
being limited to a small region is that a lot of hydro crews were
available to work here,” said Henry Hogg.
“My biggest concern right now is the
trees over roads. It’s just as bad, or worse than ’98,” said
Addington Highlands Roads Superintendent Royce Rosenblath at a
council meeting on Monday. “A few of the roads are really treed in
and the trees are leaning right over the road. If they break over a
car or a car runs into them it could be really bad.”
The township crews cannot handle the
amount of work that is required on some of the roads, including Ashby
Lake Road and one of the Lennox and Addington County roads, and the
township will be contracting out some of the work cutting down trees
that are a threat to public safety. “It's going to be costly
because there are a lot of trees, and we are going to get into some
private property issues but we are going to have to do the work,”
Rosenblath said. “We will only deal with the roads. Anything that
will affect hydro we are going to have to leave to them. But they
have put a lot of manpower on this.”
The ice load on the trees has not
abated because the weather has remained cold and snow has continued
to accumulate overtop the ice on twigs and branches. With forecasts
for temperatures remaining well below the freezing point for the next
couple of weeks, the possibility of more trees coming down on roads
or hydro lines remains high.
Both the township and the hydro crews
have been focussing on trees that are already down and trees that are
leaning over roads. Hydro lines are only now being addressed.
North Frontenac Mayor Ron Maguire, who
lives north west of Plevna, summed up how many residents are dealing
with the threat of a further loss of power. “We are keeping our
bathtub full of water, just in case,” he said. |