From USA Today:
“150M people
under winter advisories as 'unprecedented' storm stretches across 25 states;
Texas sees power outages”
An
"unprecedented" winter storm continued its assault on the nation
Monday, leaving millions without power in Texas and wreaking travel havoc
across a wide swath of the central and southern U.S. due to the heavy snow and
ice. As of Monday afternoon, more than
150 million people were under a winter storm warning, winter weather advisory
or ice storm warning in 25 states, stretching over 2,000 miles from southern
Texas to northern Maine, the National Weather Service said.
Bitter,
record-smashing cold accompanied the storm across the central U.S. Hundreds of
daily record low temperatures have been or will be broken during this prolonged
"polar plunge," the weather service said, "with some February
and even all-time low temperature records in jeopardy." More than 50
million people could see temperatures dip below zero during the next several
days, according to the Capital Weather Gang. Power outages were widespread Monday. In Texas
alone, more than 2.7 million customers were in the dark as of 10 a.m. local time,
according to poweroutage.us, a utility tracking site. Rotating power outages
were initiated by the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, or ERCOT, Monday
morning, meaning thousands went without electricity for short periods as
temperatures fell into the teens near Dallas and Houston. "We urge Texans
to put safety first," the council tweeted as it urged residents to reduce
electricity use. ERCOT manages the flow of electric power in the state. Matt
Varble in the Dallas suburb of Las Colinas told The Dallas Morning News his
power had gone out a couple of times Monday morning. The second time, it went
out about 3:30 a.m. and hadn’t returned as of 7 a.m. “It’s starting to get very
cold inside my house,” Varble told the newspaper. “I lived in the north for a
very long time and nothing like this has ever happened when I lived in New
York, Ohio and Illinois.” Houston, where temperatures hit the 70s last Tuesday,
saw readings in the teens Monday morning, prompting officials to advise
residents to prepare for hazardous roads that could be similar to those
experienced after a Category 5 hurricane. In Texas, the storm could truly be a
"once in a generation" type event when factoring in the brutally cold
conditions, AccuWeather meteorologist Brandon Buckingham said. San Angelo,
Texas, had its snowiest day ever recorded Sunday, the weather service said,
with 10.1 inches reported in the city. Thundersnow was reported early Monday as
far south as the Gulf Coast in Galveston, Texas, and Lake Charles, Louisiana,
Weather.com reported.
Texas Gov. Greg
Abbott, Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt and Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson each
activated National Guard units to assist state agencies with tasks including
rescuing stranded drivers. In a statement Sunday night, President Joe Biden
also declared an emergency in Texas and ordered federal assistance to aid state
and local response efforts. The declaration allows the Department of Homeland
Security and the Federal Emergency Management Agency to coordinate disaster
relief efforts and provide assistance, equipment and resources to those
affected by the storm. Though the snow should be winding down across Texas on
Monday, heavy snow and freezing rain are forecast to advance northeastward
Monday from the Mississippi and Ohio Valleys to the Northeast, the weather
service said. "A large swath of 6 to 12 inches of snow is forecast from
the Ohio Valley and eastern Great Lakes to northern New England,"
according to the weather service.
FlightAware
reported upward of 2,700 canceled flights across the country for Monday and
nearly 150 delays. Another 500 cancellations are predicted for Tuesday. George
Bush International Airport in Houston closed Monday morning due to ice
accumulation on runways. Austin-Bergstrom International Airport was also
closed. Although most Mardi Gras
celebrations in New Orleans are canceled this year due to the COVID-19
pandemic, the day itself will rival the coldest on record for the holiday.
Tuesday's forecast high of 38 degrees in New Orleans would tie 1899 as the
coldest Mardi Gras on record, the weather service said. Meanwhile, in the
Pacific Northwest, hundreds of thousands of people remained without power after
a weekend winter storm blanketed the region with ice and snow and made travel
treacherous. Some 300,000 people were powerless in Oregon alone, poweroutage.us
reported.
Overall, more
than 70% of the U.S. was snow-covered as of Monday morning, the weather service
reported. Unfortunately, a second winter
storm that's hitting the Northwest on Monday will bring more snow and ice to
parts of the South, Midwest and East later this week, Weather.com said.
^ This is a pretty
impressive storm. I hope we get more snow than ice. ^
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