Wild wind knocks out power to thousands in Windsor region - Action News
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Windsor

Wild wind knocks out power to thousands in Windsor region

Powerful winds forced police to close down sections of downtown London, Ont. and caused several power outages in Essex County.

Thousands of people without power throughout southwestern Ontario

An SUV was crushed by a fallen tree on Victoria Avenue, during severe wind Wednesday. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

Powerful winds wreaked havoc on southwestern Ont. communities, knocking out power, toppling trees and transport trucks while shutting down roads in several communities.

Thousands of customers were without power throughout the afternoon with more than 5,000 people in Windsor alone going without electricity. In North Lambton, an outage there included 13,500 customers.

Police had to block off sections of downtown London, Ont., while cities as far awayas Hamilton were being whipped as well. The wind knocked over a transport trailer on the Burlington Skyway Bridge.

Environment Canada issued a wind warning for all of southern Ontario Wednesday morning as gusts up to 100 km/h were expected.

The wind knocked down trees throughout Windsor, damaging homes and vehicles. The city's 311 service centre received an estimated 60 callsrelated to wind issues, including downed trees and large limbs blocking roads.

The city typically receives four or five emergency tree requests a day.

A portion of street at York and Clarence streets were closed in London, Ont., during the wind storm that knocked out power to thousands of customers. (Rob Heydari/CBC)

In London, shingles blowing off a building caused streets to be shut down to protect people from the flying debris.

"We've since shut down portions of York and Clarence, and we're asking motorists to avoid the areato ensure that they're not travelling on those roads," said police spokesperson Sandasha Bough. "We're in the process of attempting to notify the business owner."

The EssexRegion Conservation Authority issued a flood watch early in the day and later warned residents to stay out of wooded areas until the wind died down to avoid falling branches and trees.

Severe winds toppled trees throughout the Windsor region Wednesday. (Meg Roberts/CBC)