Ice storm snarls travel across Eastern Canada

A pedestrian ducks under a frozen tree on S.Clair Ave. in Toronto after an ice storm caused havoc and cut power to much of the city on Sunday, Dec. 22, 2013. AP PHOTO/THE CANADIAN PRESS, AARON VINCENT ELKAIM

TORONTO—A storm system is bringing freezing rain across much of Eastern Canada, cutting power to hundreds of thousands of people and wreaking havoc on holiday plans at one of the busiest travel times of the year.

Utility companies said power outages hit more than 400,000 customers in Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick as crews struggled to restore service. Roads and sidewalks turned into skating rinks.

Toronto Mayor Rob Ford is calling it one of the worst storms in the city’s history.

The storm has stranded passengers at airports from Toronto to St. John’s, Newfoundland, just days before Christmas.

The storm is drawing comparisons to the deadly ice storm that hit Eastern Canada in January 1998 when more than two dozen people died and about 3 million people were without power.

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