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Ontario winter wallop dumps up to 70 centimetres of snow in some parts
The storm caused widespread power outages for thousands of Hydro One customers and forced multiple school closures across Ontario, with snowfall reaching up to 70 cm in some areas.
- On Nov. 30, 2025, a multi-day winter storm was set to dump upwards of 70 centimetres of snow in parts of Ontario, The Canadian Press reported.
- As the system lingered into Saturday, Environment Canada issued snowstorm warnings from Wawa to Timmins, with forecasters warning of up to 60 centimetres in northern Ontario, an early-season event that is rare but not unprecedented.
- Heavy snow falling at up to four centimetres per hour created near-zero visibility into Friday, while multiple rounds last week dumped just shy of 60 centimetres off Lake Huron.
- Several hundred customers in the Georgian Bay area remained without power Friday morning as Norfolk County, Haldimand County, and Brant County school boards announced closures.
- Warnings cover a broad swath from Sault Ste. Marie to Chalk River and south to Walpole Island, with Toronto largely spared while Hamilton and GTA outskirts could see 15 centimetres.
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Another blast of snow set to hammer already hard-hit parts of Ontario (Canada)
Wintry weather continues to hammer southern Ontario, with snowfall warnings in place for much of the region this weekend. The warnings issued by Environment Canada stretch from Sault Ste. Marie, east to Chalk River, and south to Walpole Island on Lake St. Clair. They call for between five and 20 cen...
·Kelowna, Canada
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Total News Sources31
Leaning Left21Leaning Right0Center5Last UpdatedBias Distribution81% Left
Bias Distribution
- 81% of the sources lean Left
81% Left
L 81%
C 19%
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