Repeat snowstorms blanket Winsted

WINSTED — Winsted area residents were forced to trudge through and clean up after another winter storm earlier this week, with close to a foot of snow falling in higher elevations.

The storm closed both Winchester and Region 7 public school districts for Tuesday and Wednesday.

The heavy and wet snow led Winchester Police Chief Nicholas Guerriero to issue a 24-hour parking ban beginning Tuesday at 3 p.m to allow state and local road crews to plow streets properly.

Although the roads remained slick throughout the two-day period — with most secondary streets still troublesome for motorists into
late Wednesday morning — Winsted police said they had no reports
of any major traffic accidents in town during the storm.

The Winsted Fire Department was a bit busier. Fire officials said as of 9 a.m. Wednesday morning (The Journal’s press time) they had responded to only one storm-related call: a downed limb on a power line along Oak Street early Tuesday morning.

The area was blocked off until Connecticut Light & Power crews, who were backed up due to storm-related calls, could get to the scene and remove the tree.

During the storm, however, the fire department did respond to a report of a chimney fire at an Oak Street residence Tuesday at 8 p.m. The fire was successfully extinguished, with no additional damage to the home.

In addition to the snow and slush, more than 300 area residents were without power Wednesday morning due to downed power lines, with Winsted and Hartland the hardest hit.

The number of those without power across the region continued to climb throughout the morning.

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