Winter Weather: More than 200 million people are warned when a deadly storm hits the Northeast

The low-pressure system has had a deadly impact: since the cold temperatures began, at least 15 people have died in weather-related car accidents. In Oklahoma alone, 123 people were hospitalized Monday with weather-related injuries.

Because snow blankets are typically temperate states like Texas and Oklahoma and power outages are causing woes in Louisiana, about 200 million people are under some sort of weather-related warning.

The storm is expected to pass through the northeast by late Tuesday, leaving a trail of heavy snow and ice in its path, CNN Meteorologist Tyler Mauldin said.

Temperatures are expected to rise as it moves, although record cold mornings and afternoons will linger through Saturday, Mauldin said. Millions are bracing for temperatures that feel below zero until late in the week.

But once the low-pressure system leaves states like Texas and Oklahoma, a system that poured cold precipitation on the West Coast is expected to take its place with more winter disaster, Maudlin said.

“I am almost certain that we are slowly looking at one of the first billion dollar weather disasters of 2021,” said Mauldin.

As many as 200 cold temperature records could be broken

The unusually cold temperatures are expected to have reached almost every corner of the US.

Seattle has already reported more than 12 inches of snow over the weekend, the highest number since January 1972. Parts of Wyoming have seen more than 50 inches of snow in recent days.

A tornado was reported in Brunswick County, North Carolina, and rescue teams were dispatched to search for missing persons, according to the Wilmington Fire Department.
Striking numbers show how rare the freezing temperatures are in much of the US
According to the National Weather Service in Pueblo, Colorado, dangerous chills have been recorded in Eastern Colorado and Western Kansas. Wind chills ranging from 42 degrees below zero near Yuma, Colorado, to 25 degrees below zero near Norton, Kansas, were reported late Sunday evening.

More than six inches of snow has fallen from East Texas to Ohio, and more than a foot of snow has fallen in some areas. Heavy snowfall could reach areas downwind of Lake Erie and Ontario when the system leaves New England Tuesday evening.

By then, there’s the possibility that nearly 200 new cold temperature records have been broken.

Oklahoma City has hit a record five days without climbing more than 20 degrees – they’re not expected to hit that temperature until Thursday, over a nine-day period.

“This cold snap is expected to result in record-low temperatures comparable to the historic cold snap of February 1899 and 1905,” said the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Power and water cut-off

Falling temperatures have frozen or overloaded power sources, leaving nearly 5 million people in the dark as of Tuesday morning.

The affected customers were mainly spread across Oregon, Texas, Kentucky, West Virginia and Virginia, Poweroutage.US said.
What to do if you are in the middle of a power outage

While rolling power outages aren’t planned for Louisiana, Governor John Bel Edwards said they could happen if power generation can’t keep up with demand. Edwards said this will be the coldest weather Louisiana has experienced in decades, with about 125,000 households losing power, some over 12 hours.

In Abilene, Texas, the approximately 123,000 residents are also without water due to power outages. According to a statement from the city of Abilene, all three water treatment plants in the city had to be shut down when both power sources went out.

“It is not known exactly when the power and subsequent water supply will be returned to Abilene’s customers,” the city said.

Vaccinations postponed

Along with power, the winter storms have delayed vaccinations against Covid-19 in the US.

San Antonio, Texas, has delayed vaccinations Tuesday at the Alamodome for the second day in a row. Elsewhere in the state, Harris County, Texas, officials were racing to assign and rescue 8,400 coronavirus vaccines that were in danger of spoiling after the generator and backup generator went out Monday morning.

Missouri Governor Mike Parson announced on Monday that the state has canceled all of its massive vaccination events scheduled for Feb. 15-19 due to the extreme winter weather, according to a press release from the governor’s office.

“Missouri is experiencing harsh winter weather that makes driving dangerous and threatens the health and safety of anyone exposed to the cold. These conditions are also likely to delay some vaccine shipments,” Parson said. “We want to protect the safety of everyone involved in the mass vaccination events, from the patients being vaccinated to the volunteers who generously support these events.”

‘Roads are covered faster than we can clear them’

In anticipation of the return of the power, many officials have warned residents that now is no time to be on the road.

As of Sunday, the Mississippi Highway Patrol said it has investigated more than 400 weather-related traffic incidents.

All but eight counties in the state have reported ice on roads and bridges, according to a tweet from the Mississippi Highway Patrol.

And while officials are moving quickly to clear roads in Illinois, they are still “an absolute mess everywhere” Illinois Department of Transportation said in a pairt Monday.

“Heavy snowfall combined with drifting snow means roads are covered faster than we can clear them,” the department tweeted.

According to FlightAware.com, 2,281 flights were canceled in the US on Tuesday

Texas among the hardest hit states

Texas, a state unaccustomed to the amount of snow it has seen, had one of the worst consequences of the storm.

According to Poweroutages.US, more than 4.1 million customers are without power, and everyday life is badly affected by the cold and power outages.

The Houston Chronicle informed subscribers Monday that it had been out of power since 2 a.m. and that it did not expect to be able to produce a print newspaper before Tuesday, according to a message to subscribers.

“Even during Hurricane Harvey, our facility never lost power and we never stopped producing the print edition, but every emergency brings its own twists and turns,” the paper wrote.

The cold even interrupted cellular service in Fort Bend County Monday night, Fort Bend County Judge KP George wrote on his verified Twitter account.

“Cell phone service is starting to break down in the region as backup generators at towers freeze or run out of fuel, or both,” Judge George tweeted.

For Jamie Taylor, a mother of five in Dallas, the more than 18-hour power outage meant caring for her family in temperatures of 45 degrees in her apartment.

“Currently she wears a tracksuit, 2 robes, knee-high Ugg boots and a beanie. We survive on cereal and chips. We only lose it a little bit,” she says tweeted along with a photo of herself.

CNN’s Kay Jones, Joe Sutton, Rebekah Riess, Dave Alsup and Steve Almasy contributed to this report.

Source