From News Nation:
“South prepares for weekend
threat of debilitating snow, ice”
Weather forecasters’ predictions
of debilitating snow and ice as far south as Georgia sent parts of the region
into a tizzy Friday with shoppers scouring store shelves for storm supplies and
road crews trying to prevent a repeat of past wintertime debacles. In Virginia,
where a blizzard left thousands of motorists trapped on clogged highways
earlier this month, Gov. Ralph Northam declared a state of emergency and urged
people to take the approaching storm seriously. Some store shelves were
stripped bare of essentials including bread and milk in North Carolina. Trucks
prepared to spray a briny mixture on roads to prevent icing across the region,
and Travis Wagler said he hadn’t seen such a run on supplies at his Abbeville,
South Carolina, hardware store in at least two winters. “We’re selling
everything you might expect: sleds, but also salt, shovels and firewood,”
Wagler said from Abbeville Hardware. There, forecasters predict a quarter-inch
(0.6 centimeters) of ice or more on trees and power lines, which could lead to
days without electricity. “People are worried,” Wagler said. South Carolina
Gov. Henry McMaster issued an emergency order saying the state would likely
feel the effects of the major winter storm starting Sunday morning. “There is a
potential for very dangerous conditions caused by accumulations of ice and
snow, which will likely result in power outages across the state,” he said.
The National Weather Service said
from 2 inches to 5 inches of snow could fall as far south as northeast Georgia
from Saturday evening through Sunday, and power outages and travel problems
will be made all the worse by an additional coating of ice and winds gusting to
35 mph (56 km/h). Snow accumulations could reach 8 inches in the highest
elevations. The storm, after dipping down into the Southeast through the
weekend, was so large it was expected to head into the Northeast while dropping
snow, sleet and rain around the densely populated Eastern Seaboard. In Georgia,
Gov. Brian Kemp said the state was preparing “to the max” for the blast. He
declared a state of emergency late Friday, saying the focus of concern was the
northern part of Georgia from just above the east-west Interstate 20 route. “Hopefully,
the storm will underdeliver, but it could overdeliver. We just don’t know,” he
said. Parts of Tennessee could get as much as 6 inches of snow, forecasters
said, and northern Mississippi and the Tennessee Valley region of Alabama could
receive light snow accumulations. With lows predicted in the 20s across a wide
area, any precipitation could freeze and make driving difficult. On Friday, the
fast-moving storm dropped heavy snow across a large swath of the Midwest, where
travel conditions deteriorated and scores of schools closed or moved to online
instruction. A winter storm watch extended from just north of metro Atlanta to
Arkansas in the west and Pennsylvania in the north, covering parts of 10 states
including Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia. Travel problems could extend into
metro Atlanta, where about 2 inches of snow brought traffic to a slip-sliding
halt in 2014, an event still known as “Snowmaggedon.” At Dawsonville Hardware
about 60 miles north of Atlanta, owner Dwight Gilleland said he was already out
heaters by noon Friday and only had five bags of salt and sand left. “I think
the pandemic has made people more anxious than normal,” he said. The city of
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, had to borrow workers from other departments to
help treat roads ahead of the storm because COVID-19 had caused a shortage of
workers, spokesman Randy Britton said. Even volunteers pitched in to help as
the city stepped up its normal schedule of preparing for winter weather, he
said. “We feel real good about where we are,” he said. “We’ve checked the
boxes.”
North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper
signed an emergency order and the administration urged people to stay at home
after the storm hits. The state highway agency warned that labor shortages
meant crews might not respond to problems areas as quickly as normal. “We just
don’t have as many people to drive the trucks or operate the equipment,” said
Marcus Thompson, a spokesman for the North Carolina Department of
Transportation. Many schools and businesses will be closed Monday for the
Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, which could help reduce travel problems along
with temperatures that are supposed to rise into the 40s. Pam Thompson, who
owns Dillard House Stables in north Georgia’s Rabun County, was near the
bullseye of the largest snow forecast. She was gathering feed and hay for about
40 horses in case the snow and ice doesn’t make a fast departure. “We have snow
every year up here in the mountains and it will be anywhere from 6 to 8 inches,
and it’s usually gone pretty fast,” Thompson said. “What I’m seeing on the
forecast is that it’s going to be really cold next week, so the snow may not go
away as quickly as normal.”
^ I’ve lived in the South and
know hoe they can not handle snow (of course ice is another story and is awful
for everyone.) Up here we have an Arctic Cold Front (our 2nd in a
week) with a Regular Air Temperature of -10 F and a Windchill of -35 F and are
expecting 8-12 inches of snow tomorrow and Monday. ^
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