Police responding to ‘dozens of collisions’ across the GTA

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Authorities say “dozens of collisions” were reported in the Greater Toronto Area Saturday evening as drivers faced hazardous road conditions due to freezing drizzle.Road closures were reported on Highway 407 eastbound near Warden after a pedestrian was struck and sent to a hospital sometime after 7 p.m. Their condition was not immediately known.Meanwhile, all northbound lanes of Highway 404 are also closed at Bloomington Road for separate collisions.“Please stay safe watch out for changing road conditions, exit the highway as quickly as possible in case you’re involved in a collision,” Ontario Provincial Police wrote in a social media post shared Saturday evening. “Salters are on their way to clear the roads and we hope to have all lanes reopened soon,” it added.Dozens of collisions reported in the north east area of the GTA. EB #Hwy407 closed at Warden, NB closures on #Hwy404 from Bloomington. No reports of serious injuries, one pedestrian was struck and sent to hospital. Please stay safe watch out for changing road conditions, exit… pic.twitter.com/hSrs6Nlf0N— OPP Highway Safety Division (@OPP_HSD) February 22, 2026In North York, a pedestrian was rushed to hospital just after 8 p.m. with life-threatening injuries after being struck by a vehicle near Yonge Street and Wedgewood Drive. Police say the driver remained at the scene and an investigation is ongoing.No other details were immediately available.COLLISION:Yonge St + Wedgewood Dr8:13 p.m.– Pedestrian and vehicle involved– The pedestrian has been transported to hospital by medics with life-threatening injuries– Driver remained on scene– Expect road closures in the area#GO384932^lb— Toronto Police Operations (@TPSOperations) February 22, 2026The collisions unfolded as Environment Canada issued a yellow freezing drizzle warning for Toronto on Saturday.“An area of freezing drizzle has developed across eastern portions of the Golden Horseshoe and may last through parts of this evening,” the federal weather agency wrote.“Roads, walkways, and other surfaces will likely become icy and slippery,” it added. “Icy surfaces will likely form and could be difficult to detect. There is risk of injury due to slips and falls.”