Oakville Beaver, 29 Nov 2018, p. 5

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

5 | O akville B eaver | T hursday,N ovem ber 29,2018 insidehalton.com For a Free consultation call oakville: 905.842.2022 ToronTo: 416.644.3999 Denied Disabled Benefits? I canhelp. My teamof experienced lawyers can help youwith: •Disability Claims Short-TermDisability, long-TermDisability, CPPShort-TermDisability, long-TermDisability, CPP •Car accidents •Slip and Falls •Wrongful Dismissal Injured? injurY and emploYment law I don't get paid unless I getYoumoneY. oFFiCeS in oakville and ToronTo eMail: sspadafora@slspc.ca Mississauga Store 5980 McLaughlin Rd. Unit 3 Mississauga, ON L5R 3X9 +1 905 712 4548 Oakville Store 243 Speers Rd. Oakville, ON L6K2E8 +1 905 849 LITE (5483) Burlington Store 1515 North Service Road Burlington, ON L7P 0A2 +1 905 331 7444 Shop online www.conceptlighting.ca C O N C E P T L I G H T I N G G R O U P chaNdELIERSaLE ChristmasJust in time for www.villageortho.ca At Village Orthodontics we specialize in Aligners & Traditional Braces.At Village Orthodontics we specialize in Aligners & Traditional Braces. Start the Holiday season off by scheduling your complimentary consultation! 647-496-1424 2-2983 Westoak Trails Blvd.,Oakville Hunker down and invest in some long johns, it's going to be a long, cold winter. "That is really what the patterns are setting up for, for a lot of eastern Canadafor a lot of eastern Canadaf but that certainly includes us down here in southern Ontario and more specifi- cally us in Halton region," said Michael Carter, meteo- rologist with The Weather Network. "We're looking at probably a pretty extended period of below normal tem- peratures heading into the next few months, so it's cer- tainly going to feel like win- ter across the region this year." We're already in a coldWe're already in a coldW pattern as much of October and November have proven, and this pattern is likely to stick with us even into the early part of spring as well, said Carter. If there is a positive side to this news, our coldest winters don't tend to be our snowiest, because of the flow of drier Arctic air, heflow of drier Arctic air, hef added. "So overall, we may see precipitation tipping a bit below normal this year." The Weather Network's official forecast for the re- gion has us at near normal snowfall from December through February. Using Pearson airport numbers as a benchmark, a typical De- cember snowfall would be 25 centimetres; in January, 30 centimetres and in Febru- ary, typically 24 centi- metres. Official forecast for Hal- ton is near normal snowfall, tempered by the fact the re- gion is not one of the "more favoured lake effect areas"favoured lake effect areas"f particularly when com- pared to locations like Lon- don and the Niagara and Bruce Peninsulas. "For us on the northern edge of Lake Ontario, we tend to see a little less so if it's going to tip one way or the other, it's likely to be a bit below normal. "It's going to vary widely across the region depending on exactly where you are in the region. Our snowfall tends to be so heavily influ- enced by things like eleva- tion, proximity to the lake, whether you're in a lake ef- fect zone or not."fect zone or not."f While we might get off a bit easy in terms of snowfall, with the colder than normal temperatures, any snow that falls will stick around, said Carter. NEWS HALTON REGION IN FOR A LONG, COLD WINTER The Weather Network's Michael Carter The Weather Network photo KATHY YANCHUS kyanchus@metroland.com See ANY, page 18

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy