Dayton Daily News

Snow slows or shuts down much of the Deep South

More than 400 flights canceled at Atlanta airport.

- By Jonathan Landrum Jr.

ATLANTA — Snowfall shrouding much of the Deep South began tapering off early Saturday, but freezing temperatur­es kept roads slick and thousands without electricit­y throughout the region while planes remained grounded at the world’s busiest airport.

Forecaster­s warned that moisture on the roadways could freeze and cause black ice to form. The National Weather Service said that while snow flurries would end by midday in areas including metro Atlanta, temperatur­es at or below freezing could cause transparen­t layers of thin ice to form on bridges and other elevated roadways.

The frigid temperatur­es behind a cold front combined with moisture off the Gulf of Mexico to bring unusual wintry weather to parts of the South.

Preliminar­y reports to the weather service showed up to 10 inches of snowfall in northwest Georgia, with 7 inches of accumulati­on in parts of metro Atlanta. Another 10 inches of snow was reported in Anniston, Alabama, while up to 7 inches were reported in Mississipp­i. Rare flurries were even reported in New Orleans.

“It’s very, very abnormal and rare that we would get totals like that this time of year,” said Sid King, a meteorolog­ist for the National Weather Service in the Atlanta area. “It’s really not even winter yet. I would not be surprised if we broke a lot of records.”

But the snow wasn’t expected to outlast the weekend. King said warming temperatur­es and sunny skies should melt most of it in time for shivering Southerner­s to return to work and school Monday.

Officials at the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal Airport, which holds the world record for annual number of passengers, said delays and cancellati­ons were expected.

“Passengers should monitor their airline’s media channels for flight info,” the airport said via Twitter. Airport spokesman Reese McCranie said more than 400 flights were canceled Saturday morning.

Not everyone was anxious to flee, though. Members of a central Florida family found their way to Atlanta specifical­ly to witness the white drifts.

“It’s beautiful,” said Tim Moss, while his two sons and wife threw snowballs at each other near a McDonald’s parking lot early Saturday. He said the family — including his mother — made a spontaneou­s decision late Friday to leave 80-degree weather in Florida and drive seven hours to see snow for the first time.

“A lot of people who live here are staying in,” said Moss. “They don’t want to get out in it. But we want to get out and run around in it.”

The snowstorms knocked out electricit­y to thousands across the South. More than 382,000 homes and businesses were still without electricit­y Saturday in Georgia, Alabama, Mississipp­i and Louisiana.

Southern Pine Electric Co-operative has more than 12,000 customers without power Saturday in south Mississipp­i. The co-op had about twice that many outages at their peak, utility spokesman Brock Williamson said. Getting everyone’s electricit­y restored could take days.

“This may be the first time we’ve ever dealt with a winter storm that’s created so many outages,” he said.

In Atlanta, a fallen power line was blamed for electrocut­ing a man late Friday. Bystanders tried to warn the man before he walked into the dangling live wire, Atlanta police Sgt. John Chafee said Saturday. He said it was unclear if the wire was downed because of the icy weather.

A freeze warning was in effect Saturday for parts of northern Florida, southeast Alabama and southwest Georgia.

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 ?? MIKE STEWART / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tom Virgili surveys the damage from broken limbs of pine trees after a heavy snow fall Saturday in Kennesaw, Ga.
MIKE STEWART / ASSOCIATED PRESS Tom Virgili surveys the damage from broken limbs of pine trees after a heavy snow fall Saturday in Kennesaw, Ga.

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