power outage toronto

Toronto residents are out in the streets reacting to biggest blackout in years

The huge blackout that struck Toronto on Tuesday has had a ripple effect across the city, eliciting strong reactions from the public and resulting in offices and stores shuttering early for the day.

A reported figure in excess of 165,000 Toronto Hydro customers are expected to remain without power until well into Tuesday evening and potentially into the early morning hours of Wednesday.

It's being called the biggest blackout of the last decade.

Even two hours into what is expected to be an outage lasting up to 12 hours in some areas, people were clearly growing impatient with the wait as the workday burned away before their eyes.

Other 9-to-5ers lucked out thanks to the outage. The lunch rush quickly turned into the end-of-day rush in the city's Financial District, where throngs of pedestrians were out on the street headed home from work hours early amid reports that the outage would persist past the end of the workday.

Crowds out in the street are drawing comparisons to the 2003 blackout that plunged the entire Northeast into darkness just shy of 21 years ago.

In fact, one person even said it was the most alive they've seen the city since the before times.

Some are using the blackout as an opportunity for some territorial humour.

Toronto Hydro has blamed the outage on provincial energy company Hydro One, issuing a statement saying that crews are "currently responding to widespread outages throughout the city as a result of a loss of supply from Hydro One."

Lead photo by

Reimar/Shutterstock


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