British Columbia

More snow, cold temperatures ahead for week

A record-breaking winter storm created chaos over the weekend, and more snow is expected to blanket parts of the South Coast and Fraser Valley this week.

After record-breaking weekend, snow remains in forecast.

Snowy cars line an East Vancouver street after Monday morning's snow. (Christer Waara/CBC)

The winter weather that has caused school closures, commuter chaos and power outages isn't going to let up anytime soon.

Environment Canada has reissued snowfall warnings for Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley, with up to 15 centimetres of new snow expected to fall by tomorrow morning.

As the flakes began to fly Friday, records began to fall, with Vancouver airport reporting 12 centimetres of snow by the end of the day — beating the old record of 10.7 centimetres that was set in 1947. By Monday, some areas around Chilliwack had nearly 80 centimetres piled up. 

'It's just day after day of it.'

Environment Canada meteorologist Jennifer Hay says more winter weather is ahead of us.

"It's just day after day of it. There's a low [pressure sytem] that's just west of the island. It's sitting in place and it's acting as a funnel to bring in other systems off the ocean and it's meeting cold air from the interior." 

Vehicles are seen stuck on a small snow covered hill in North Vancouver, B.C. on Friday. (Jonathan Hayward/CP)

With snow expected to hit again later Monday and continue overnight, many areas could see an additional five to 15 centimetres by Tuesday morning. Freezing temperatures will ensure the white stuff sticks around until another pacific storm arrives Wednesday — bringing heavy snow before changing over to rain. 

But we won't stay in the deep freeze for too long — milder air will finally move in for the second half of the week bringing rain and much milder temperatures to the Lower Mainland.