Ice Storm Cuts Electricity to More Than 1 Million
Storm May Leave Them in Darkness for Days
Here we go again. Arkansas is coated in 3 inches of ice. Kentucky and Oklahoma are also ice-covered, which has taken down power lines. This massive storm, which stretches to Maine is blasting Northeast. At least 55 have died. It may be a long time before electricity is restored. Pictured above is Lance McClintock of Long, Okla. He's working on a fire to cook chicken. The couple was among the hundreds of thousands who lost power in the Midwest ice storm of 2007. If these and the other 1,000,000 people without electricity had purchased and knew how to use home generators safely, they would be warm and comfortable, cooking inside. Know how to keep your food safe when the power goes out. In times of prolonged power outages especially in winter there are always deaths and carbon monoxide poisoning due to improperly used generators. At no time should they ever be operated indoors! Generators are literally life-savers in bone-chilling winters and life-sapping summer heat. But, you need to know you to use them correctly and how to select the right one for your needs. |
January 28, 2009
By John Raby
AP
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - A destructive winter storm left more than a million customers in the dark before barreling into the Northeast on Wednesday, delaying flights and turning the morning rush into the morning slush as communities braced for the worst.
Photo: A disabled auto sits stranded along I-71 near Glencoe, Ky., Tuesday, Jan. 27, 2009. Gov. Steve Beshear declared a statewide emergency as a powerful winter storm barrels through Kentucky. (AP / Ed Reinke)
The storm has been blamed for at least 23 deaths and a glaze of ice and snow that caused widespread power failures from the Southern Plains to the East Coast. Authorities said it could be a week before some communities have electricity again.
Tree limbs encased in ice tumbled onto roads and crashed onto power lines in hard-hit Arkansas, Kentucky and Oklahoma on Tuesday and overnight. In Arkansas where ice was 3 inches thick in some places people huddled next to portable heaters and wood-burning fires as utilities warned electricity may be out for a week or more.
David Stark had an adventurous trip on Interstate 71 to get to work in La Grange, in northern Kentucky.
"The roads look clear but you can't do over 40 mph," he said during a stop at a convenience store for gas and food. "There's a lot of black ice. I slipped and slid everywhere."
Since the storm began building on Monday, the weather had been blamed for at least six deaths in Texas, four in Arkansas, three in Virginia, six in Missouri, two in Oklahoma, and one each in Ohio and Indiana. Winter storm warnings were in effect from Texas to New England on Wednesday.
Power was being restored to thousands of residents of Oklahoma, which was spared the destruction caused by an ice storm that killed nearly 30 people and darkened a half-million homes and businesses for days about 13 months ago.
770,000 LOSE POWER IN KY., ARK.
Photo: Nicholas Clawson walks past ice-covered trees during ice and wintery weather on Tues., Jan. 27, 2009 in Fayetteville, Ark. (AP / Beth Hall
But next door in Arkansas, about 300,000 customers lacked power Wednesday morning. More than 470,000 were in the dark in Kentucky, where Pearl Schmidt's family endured a cold night without power at their Paintsville home.
"We bundled up together on a bed with four blankets. It's freezing," she said.
In Missouri, Illinois, Indiana and Ohio, nearly 300,000 homes and businesses were in the dark as ice and snow coated parts of the states. Ohio's top Republican lawmaker, Senate President Bill Harris, slipped on ice outside a hotel near the Statehouse in Columbus, broke a leg and missed the governor's State of the State address Wednesday.
"Lines are still breaking," said John Campbell, the operations chief for Missouri's State Emergency Management Agency. "All the reports we are getting is they are losing the battle right now just because precipitation is still falling."
Tracey Ramey of Waynesville, Ohio, a village about 20 miles southeast of Dayton, said her husband left for his job as a snow-plow operator late Monday with an overnight bag and hasn't been able to return. He did call her Wednesday morning to caution her not to go to her data-entry job.
"He said, 'There's 2 inches of ice on the road and there's no way you're going to make it to work,'" she said.
Photo: A vehicle is blocked by a downed tree Tuesday, Jan. 27, 2009 on A Baxter County, Ark.,rural road. A major winter storm slammed northern Arkansas Tuesday downing hundreds of trees and causing power outages.(AP / Baxter Bulletin, Kevin Pieper)
FLIGHTS CANCELLED, DELAYED
Air travelers hunkered down at airports throughout the region.
Philadelphia International reported scattered cancellations and delays Wednesday morning. Airlines canceled more than a dozen flights each out of Columbus and Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport. Arrivals and departures were delayed as long as three hours at New York-area airports.
Boston also saw air travel disruptions.
The snow and sleet abated somewhat in southeastern Pennsylvania as temperatures rose above freezing later in the day. But in northern and central Pennsylvania, snow accumulations could reach 4 to 8 inches. Up to 8 inches was expected in parts of western Pennsylvania.
Cynthia Lahiba of Baltimore walked through the ice and snow about six blocks to her downtown office Wednesday.
"My $65 pair of shoes are going to be ruined. It's pretty bad out here," she said.
The storm was already turning to rain in New Jersey by Wednesday morning, creating a soggy commute.
Photo: Brit Bruns, an engineer with the Arkansas Highway Transportation Department, cuts tree branches blocking State Highway 126 Tuesday morning Jan. 27, 2009 in Baxter County, Ark. A major winter storm slammed northern Arkansas Tuesday coating the area with nearly an inch of ice, downing trees and causing power outages. (AP / Baxter Bulletin, Kevin Piper)
Some parts of Vermont expected 14 inches of snow, and the entire state was under a winter storm warning through early Thursday. Inland areas of Maine expected 2 feet of snow before the storm ends, and snow also fell over New York and Boston, extending commute times.
Forecasters said northwestern Connecticut could get 8 inches of snow, while Hartford and other inland areas could get 6. The National Weather Service expected the snow to turn into rain in the afternoon and evening.
Hundreds of public schools, colleges and universities in several states had called off classes Tuesday. Students were to be kept home again Wednesday in parts of West Virginia, a day after all 55 counties closed schools.
The weather gave President Barack Obama a chance to rib his new hometown on its winter weather wimpiness. "My children's school was canceled today," he joked with reporters. "Because of what? Some ice?"
"As my children pointed out, in Chicago, school is never canceled," Obama said to laughter.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/28873371/