B.C.’s Lower Mainland expected to see more snow during Friday's rush hour
More snow is in the forecast Friday for British Columbia’s south coast, days after a significant storm that brought rush hour traffic in the Lower Mainland to a standstill.
Environment Canada has issued a special weather statement for Metro Vancouver, the Fraser Valley, the Sunshine Coast, Howe Sound and the Southern Gulf Islands.
A low pressure system will brush the south coast and is expected to bring two to five centimeteres of snow.
Meteorologists are warning of slippery road conditions due to snow and temperatures near freezing.
“Although the amounts today are not really anticipated to be just as much as Tuesday's amount, we can anticipate the snow to impact the afternoon or this evening's commute as it can be a snow-rain mix, causing things to become slushy and dicey,” said Derek Lee, a meteorologist with Environment Canada.
There’s also a risk of freezing rain in some areas.
“Snowfall accumulations will generally be light given precipitation rate, strength of the outflow winds and the humidity of the near surface atmospheric layer,” wrote Environment Canada in a weather bulletin.
It says the timing is likely to be during this afternoon's commute and into the evening hours.
“This event will have significantly less snow than Tuesday's event,” wrote the weather agency.
Earlier this week, a significant dump of snow across the Lower Mainland caused commuter chaos.
Icy conditions triggered a series of accidents which shutdown most of the arterial routes in the region.
That included the Alex Fraser Bridge where many drivers were stranded for upwards of eight hours, some even opted to stay in their vehicles overnight.
“The ground wasn't super cold at the time and then there was a bit of dusting of snowfall before the main bulk came. So maybe there was a little bit of a melt during the day from the salt with a little bit of snow before that huge dump came. So it was kind of icy before the main dump of snow came,” said Lee.
BCAA says it handled more than 4500 roadside assistance calls on Tuesday and Wednesday, a 40 per cent increase compared to a typical day.
A number of local politicians are now calling for a snow summit.
They’d like the ministry of transportation, TransLink, contractors, paramedics, local cities and their mayors to get together and determine what went wrong and how to prevent a disaster like that from happening again.
Environment Canada says don’t put your snow shovel away just yet. it’s a La Nina year, meaning more snow is likely.
“We can see a little bit of warm up beginning next week and it will be a gradual warm up. So don't count on it being totally just rain yet in the forecast next week,” said Lee.
With files from CTV News Vancouver’s St John Alexander and Abigail Turner
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Feds 'not interested' in investing in LNG facilities: energy minister
Energy and Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson says the federal government is 'not interested' in subsidizing future liquefied natural gas (LNG) projects, including the electrification of projects currently in the works.
Chants of 'shame on you' greet guests arriving for the annual White House correspondents' dinner
An election-year roast of U.S. President Joe Biden before journalists, celebrities and politicians at the annual White House correspondents' dinner Saturday.
Aerial photos show wide devastation left by tornado in China's Guangzhou
Aerial photos posted by Chinese state media on Sunday showed the wide devastation of a part of the southern city of Guangzhou after a tornado swept through the day before, killing five people, injuring dozens others and damaging over a hundred buildings.
Global measles cases nearly doubled in one year, researchers say
The number of measles cases around the world nearly doubled from 2022 to 2023, researchers say, presenting a challenge to efforts to achieve and maintain elimination status in many countries.
Fair share: the right office solution can take finding the right partner
The rise of remote and hybrid work has made it harder to justify a full office, so more are leaning on co-working spaces that they share with many others for convenience and cost savings. The choice, however, comes at the expense of privacy and control.
A top Qatari official urges Israel and Hamas to do more to reach a ceasefire deal
A senior Qatari official has urged both Israel and Hamas to show "more commitment and more seriousness" in ceasefire negotiations in interviews with Israeli media, as pressure builds on both sides to move toward a deal that would set Israeli hostages free and bring potential respite in the nearly seven-month-long war in Gaza.
What Trudeau's podcast appearances say about the Liberals' next ballot box question
Trudeau recently appeared on four podcasts as he travels the country talking up the Liberals' latest budget, which he's pitching as a plan to inject more economic fairness into society for those under 40 — a cohort that has kept Trudeau in power since 2015 but is increasingly turning to Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre.
Russian drones set a hotel ablaze in a Ukrainian Black Sea city
Russian drones early Sunday struck the Black Sea city of Mykolaiv, setting a hotel ablaze and damaging energy infrastructure, the local Ukrainian governor reported, while ammunition shortages continued to hobble Kyiv's troops in the more than two-year-old war.
A munitions explosion at a Cambodian army base kills 20 soldiers, but its cause is unclear
Security was tight around a military base in southwestern Cambodia on Sunday, a day after a huge explosion there killed 20 soldiers, wounded others and damaged nearby houses.