Sheet of ice flies off vehicle on QEW in Grimsby, injuring person
Published February 23, 2023 at 8:23 pm
A flying sheet of ice apparently caused an injury to a passenger in a vehicle on Queen Elizabeth Way highway on Thursday night, illustrating the risk that failing to clear off one’s car after a big storm poses to other road users.
A report stated emergency crews were treating a patient on the Fort Erie-bound QEW near Casablanca Blvd., after the ice came off of another vehicle and stuck the unfortunate person in the chest. Video showed two fire trucks were parked at the scene. Ontario law requires that windshields, roofs and hoods of vehicles be completely cleared of ice and snow before going out on the roads. Failing to do so can result in a significant fine — $50 to $500 for drivers of a personal vehicle, and $100 to $1,000 for drivers of a commercial vehicle.
Real-time highway traffic data did not list any closures on the QEW. However, one of the firetrucks driven by the emergency crews was parked in the left-hand lane, creating a lane restriction and shielding the workers and injured person.
#Niagara #Grimsby
Traffic Alert:
Emergency crews tending to a patient injured by a sheet of ice that came off another vehicle and struck the occupant in the chest on the QEW Buffalo-bound at Casablanca Boulevard. Use caution in the area – and clean the ice off your own vehicle. pic.twitter.com/GyBmBrdQBP— Shane B. Murphy (@shanermurph) February 23, 2023
The Hamilton and Niagara regions had a major ice storm on Wednesday night that carried into Thursday. Weather historian Rolf Campbell said that Hamilton received 14.6 mm of snow, which was the most it was received on Feb. 22 in 123 years. With freezing rain mixed in — and contributing to ice build-up — the total precipitation reached 30.2 mm, making for Hamilton’s wettest day of the winter. (Grimsby is just south and east of Hamilton’s boundary.)
With 30.2mm of precipitation, yesterday was #Hamilton's wettest day so far this winter. #YHM #YhmWx pic.twitter.com/S7Yub0O3fO
— Hamilton Weather Records🌤 (@YHM_Weather) February 23, 2023
inNiagaraRegion's Editorial Standards and Policies🥉With 14.6cm of snow, yesterday was #Hamilton's snowiest Feb 22nd in more than 100 years, since 1900. #YhmWx #YHM pic.twitter.com/KwYCEx2ifG
— Hamilton Weather Records🌤 (@YHM_Weather) February 23, 2023