Home NEWS Woman found unconscious from carbon monoxide poisoning as Manitobans struggle without power after storm | CBC News

Woman found unconscious from carbon monoxide poisoning as Manitobans struggle without power after storm | CBC News

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Woman found unconscious from carbon monoxide poisoning as Manitobans struggle without power after storm | - News

Manitoba Hydro urges customers reeling from a snowstorm that’s left them without electricity for days to keep fuel-burning equipment like heaters out of their homes after a woman was found unconscious in southern Manitoba.The City of Winnipeg has called in help from other provinces to clean up trees that have fallen from a devastating snowstorm that’s unlike anything that Manitoba Hydro has seen before. (John Woods/The Canadian Press)Manitoba Hydro is urging customers reeling from a snowstorm that’s left them without electricity for days to keep fuel-burning equipment like heaters out of their homes after a woman was found unconscious. Some people in powerless homes have resorted to bringing generators, patio heaters or barbecues inside, but officials are warning against doing that because, Hydro spokesperson Bruce Owen said, the equipment is not properly ventilated.A woman outside Morden in southern Manitoba is believed to have lost consciousness from carbon monoxide poisoning on Sunday after a propane heater was hauled into her house. She is now recovering in hospital. A Hydro crew happened across the scene while trying to restore electricity from an unprecedented storm that’s knocked down thousands of trees, downed power lines and forced the province, Winnipeg and many municipalities to call a state of emergency. Around 5,700 people have been evacuated. “A gentleman came out of the house distraught and was saying his wife was unconscious,” Owen said. “We got into the house right away and got her out, where she was able to at least get some fresh air.” Hydro staff working next 21 days Five days after the storm first rolled through, pummelling trees still laden with leaves and the electricity network, Owen said Manitoba Hydro’s work is far from over. As of Tuesday morning, 13,000 customers remained without power — and it may take seven to 10 days in some areas for electricity to be restored. The public utility is mandating its line crews, who have been working 16-hour days to restore power, to remain on the job for the next 21 days.  A Manitoba Hydro tower near Portage la Prairie is buckled under the pressure of the unprecedented storm that dumped heavy, wet snow on the region. (CBC) Employees were notified by Hydro they must cancel any previously booked vacations, and they’d be reimbursed for any plans they scrap.  “We need everyone,” Owen said in an email. In the City of Winnipeg where much of the snow has melted, the fallout from the storm could last for months. Officials say cleaning up some 30,000 damaged trees could last until spring and cost millions of dollars. The city is bringing in people from Saskatchewan and Alberta to help with the work. Winnipeg’s executive policy committee approved a motion Tuesday calling on financial aid from the provincial government. More lines down than standing Meanwhile, Manitoba Hydro is urging residents to be patient as they try to restore power, notably in the areas hardest hit such as Portage la Prairie, Neepawa, Dauphin and the Interlake. There were more power lines and poles down than standing, chief executive officer Jay Grewal said last weekend. They’re also insisting that customers keep their propane equipment outside, after hearing multiple reports of people ignoring the advice. “Carbon monoxide is an insidious gas. You can’t smell it and it just creeps in, and you get tired, you feel ill. You shake it off, thinking there’s nothing wrong,” Owen said. “The next thing you know, you’re unconscious.” The situation continues to evolve, Owen said. Tree branches weighed down by wet, heavy snow dropped throughout Winnipeg last week, including on Spence Street. (Bartley Kives/CBC) Trees weakened by the blast of wet, thick snow are starting to break from the wind, he told CBC Manitoba’s Information Radio on Monday, and sometimes they’re landing on power lines. While 13,000 customers had no power Tuesday morning, that’s an improvement from the tens of thousands of people who have been in the dark for 48 hours or more. Each customer is a single billing location, which can represent multiple people living in a residence. Some 250,000 Manitoba residences and businesses have been without power for at least some time since Oct. 10. Manitoba’s public insurer has counted 2,000 collision claims since that time.  By midday Tuesday, only 260 Winnipeggers were without power.  Portage la Prairie and neighbouring rural areas are among the most battered from the storm. At one point, the entire city of Portage la Prairie, which has a population of about 13,000, was without power, and since lift stations that pump wastewater were down, residents were advised to not flush their toilets.  Crews clean up after the snowstorm hit parts of Manitoba late last week, knocking out power to homes. (John Woods/The Canadian Press) A pressing focus for Hydro crews, as well as their reinforcements called in from Saskatchewan, Ontario and Minnesota, is fixing the downed transmission system in Portage la Prairie that feeds a number of substations. “Without that, those substations just don’t have the juice to give people the electricity they need,” Owen said. Patience running thin The rural municipality of Portage has 2,700 customers without electricity, as of Tuesday. Reeve Kameron Blight says he’s impressed with how his neighbours are helping one another, but their patience — and his — was running thin. They want more information from Manitoba Hydro on how long the outage will last. “We feel like we’re being kept in the dark,” Blight told CBC Manitoba’s Radio Noon on Tuesday.  Storm evacuees were among the hotel guests at Winnipeg’s Victoria Inn on Monday. (Walther Bernal/CBC) The public utility has said it’s too difficult to estimate restoration times. The Canadian Red Cross says more than 5,500 people from 13 First Nations have been evacuated. The vast majority of people are staying in Winnipeg, but some are in Brandon and Dauphin. Some of the displaced Manitobans have slammed the evacuation process as chaotic, and say they’re worried about elders sleeping on cots at Winnipeg’s convention centre. The Red Cross plans to move the most vulnerable people into hotels, spokesperson Jason Small said Tuesday morning. Blight said he admires the resiliency of the Manitobans who are helping out their neighbours in need. He said people are delivering food, sharing generators and offering places to stay. “I’ll be honest with you, I’m a damn proud Manitoban. I’ve been through 2011 flood and the 2014 flood and Manitobans always come together, and I’m very grateful for that.” With files from CBC’s Marcy Markusa, Meaghan Ketcheson, Marjorie Dowhos, The Canadian Press

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