Friday's strong winds and thunderstorms that swept through Ontario left hundreds of thousands of customers without power and others assessing damage to their properties.
Hydro One reported Friday evening that a total of 167,000 customers were without power. As of Saturday afternoon, that number dropped to approximately 130,000.
Within the GTA, Toronto Hydro says it's making good progress getting everyone back on the grid. The number of customers without electricity dropped to less than 600 late Saturday afternoon, down from 6,000 late Friday night and over 8,000 at the height of the storm.
"We don't have any ETORs (estimated time of restoration) at this time," Toronto Hydro spokesperson Christina Basil told NEWSTALK1010. "This is because the last leg of restoration is often the lengthiest."
"With these particular repairs - when we're looking at downed wires caused by trees down and there are broken poles, repairs tend to be lengthier in nature, and that's because you have to get a forestry crew in to clear the three before you can even begin to make repairs," she added.
She says the major outages have been taken care of and it's the smaller outages they are currently tending to.
The strongest wind gusts recorded at Pearson Airport topped out at 82 kilometres per hour on Friday afternoon.
Meantime, in Ottawa, tens of thousands remained in the dark early Saturday morning after a tornado ripped through the west end of the city late Friday afternoon. The tornado - which crossed into Gatineau - left at least 30 people injured, five of them in serious or critical condition.
All special weather statements and wind warnings were dropped by Environment Canada shortly after midnight Saturday.