Winter weather: More than 200 million people are under alerts as a deadly storm moves into the Northeast
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The low-pressure system has had a deadly impact: At least 15 people have died in weather-related vehicle accidents since the cold temperatures set in. In Oklahoma alone, 123 people were in the hospital Monday with weather-related injuries.
As snow blankets typically temperate states like Texas and Oklahoma and power outages cause misery in Louisiana, about 200 million people remain under some sort of weather-related alert.
The storm is expected to move out through the Northeast 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, though record cold mornings and afternoons will linger through Saturday, Mauldin said. Millions are bracing for temperatures that feel below zero through late in the week.
But once the low-pressure system leaves states like Texas and Oklahoma, a system that has been pouring cold precipitation on the West Coast is expected to take its place with more wintry mischief, Maudlin said.
“I’m almost certain that we are slowly watching one of the first billion-dollar weather disaster of 2021 unfold,” Mauldin said.
As many as 200 more cold temperature records could be broken
The unusually cold temperatures are expected to have reached nearly every corner of the US.
Seattle has already reported more than 11 inches of snow over the weekend, the most since January 1972. More than 50 inches of snow has fallen in parts of Wyoming over the past few days.
More than 6 inches of snow has fallen from East Texas to Ohio, with some areas picking up more than a foot. Heavy snow could reach areas downwind of Lake Erie and Ontario as the system exits New England through Tuesday evening.
By that time, there is the potential for nearly 200 more cold temperature records to have been broken.
Oklahoma City has gone a record five days without climbing over 20 degrees — they are not expected to top that temperature until Thursday, for a stretch of nine days.
Power and water shutoff
Dropping temperatures have frozen or overworked power sources, leaving nearly 5 million people in the dark as of early Tuesday morning.
Though rolling power outages are not planned for Louisiana, Gov. John Bel Edwards said they could happen if the power generation is unable to keep up with the demand. Edwards said this will be the coldest weather Louisiana has experienced in several decades, and that about 125,000 households have lost power, some for over 12 hours.
In Abilene, Texas, the approximately 123,000 residents are also without water due to power outages. All three water treatment plants in the city had to be shut off when both of their power sources went out, according to a statement from the City of Abilene.
“It is not known exactly when power and subsequent water service will be returned to Abilene water customers,” the city said.
‘Roads are getting covered faster than we can get them cleared’
While waiting for the power to come back on, many officials have cautioned residents that now is no time to be on the road.
Since 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.
“Heavy snowfall rates combined with blowing snow means that roads are getting covered faster than we can get them cleared,” the department tweeted.
CNN’s Kay Jones, Joe Sutton, Rebekah Riess, Dave Alsup and Steve Almasy contributed to this report.
2021-02-16 03:29:10
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