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Concurrently, extensive flooding disrupted holiday planning across Quebec, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta following consecutive weeks of severe storms.
Montreal's Pierrefonds-Roxboro borough canceled its annual Canada Day parade after recording up to 170 millimeters of rainfall, affecting over 300 homes and requiring a multi-week cleanup effort.
Further west, the Town of Neepawa in Manitoba postponed its celebrations after a severe storm left 14,000 customers without power and dropped 100 millimeters of rain.
Saskatchewan provincial parks canceled fireworks due to excess flooding, while Alberta municipalities issued flood warnings following heavy downpours that stressed local waterways in Calgary and Edmonton.
The Town of Tofield canceled its events entirely during cleanup operations, while other towns between Edmonton and Calgary prepared to move activities indoors.
An Edmonton municipal spokesperson confirmed that a special weather statement forecasting heavy rain remained active, though standard programming would continue unless wind speeds exceeded 40 kilometers per hour.
"The only weather impacts that may affect the fireworks are strong winds (higher than 40 km/h), lightning, extreme heat or a fire ban," said the Edmonton spokesperson.
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Boat launches along the North Saskatchewan River remain closed, and municipal officials banned spectators from viewing fireworks from the river or nearby banks.