Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Arctic freeze continues to blast huge swaths of the U.S.

- By Carolyn Thompson, Matthew Brown and Valerie Gonzalez

Brutally cold temperatur­es and dangerous wind chills stayed put across much of the U.S. on Monday, promising the coldest temperatur­es ever for Iowa’s presidenti­al nominating contest, holding up travelers, and testing the mettle of NFL fans in Buffalo for a playoff game that was delayed a day by windwhippe­d snow.

About 150 million Americans were under a wind chill warning or advisory for dangerous cold and wind, said Zack Taylor, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in College Park, Maryland, as an Arctic air mass spilled south and eastward across the U.S.

Sunday morning saw temperatur­es as low as minus 20 degrees to minus 40 in northern and northeast Montana. Saco, Montana, dropped to minus 51.

BUFFALO, N.Y. >>

Subzero lows reached as far south as Kansas, Missouri, Illinois and parts of Indiana, Taylor said.

About 114,000 U.S. homes and businesses were without power late Monday, the bulk of them in Oregon after widespread outages that started Saturday. Portland General Electric warned that strong winds forecast for Monday and threat of an ice storm Tuesday could delay restoratio­n efforts.

Classes were cancelled Tuesday for students in major cities including Chicago — the nation’s fourth-largest public school district — Denver, Dallas and Fort Worth.

The storm was blamed for at least four weekend deaths around Portland, including two people who died of suspected hypothermi­a. Another man was killed after a tree fell on his house and a woman died in a fire that spread from an open-flame stove after a tree fell onto an RV.

Three deaths of homeless people were under investigat­ion in the Milwaukee area. They likely died from hypothermi­a, officials said. A 64-year-old man was found dead under a bridge Friday, a 69-year-man was pronounced dead after being found in a vehicle on Saturday and on Monday a 40-year-old man was found dead near railroad tracks, the Milwaukee County Medical Examiner’s Office said.

In Utah, where almost four feet of snow fell in the mountains over a 24-hour period, a snowmobile­r was struck and killed Sunday night by a semitraile­r about 70 miles southeast of Salt Lake City, according to the Utah Highway Patrol. The victim was attempting to cross U.S. Highway 40.

In Wyoming, a backcountr­y skier was killed after triggering a 50-feet wide avalanche. The victim was swept into a gully and through brush and trees, then remained buried for about fifteen minutes before being found by a companion in the mountains south of Alpine, Wyoming, on Sunday afternoon, according to the Bridgertet­on

Avalanche Center.

It marked the third U.S. avalanche fatality in recent days, following a Wednesday accident at a California ski resort that killed one person and injured three others, and another that killed a person on Thursday in the Idaho backcountr­y near the Montana border.

Swirling snow and avalanche dangers prompted numerous road closures across the Rocky Mountains.

East of the resort community of Vail, Colorado, officials closed a 20-mile stretch of Interstate 70, the primary east-west highway through the state.

Crews on Monday continued clearing snow after a weekend avalanche briefly trapped the occupants of 10 cars and shut down the road over Berthoud Pass in central Colorado. Kaitlyn Punzalan was in a car with her husband and some friends heading home to Denver when they were caught in the slide.

Air travelers across the country experience­d delays and cancellati­ons. The flight tracking service Flightawar­e reported about 2,900 cancellati­ons Monday within, into or out of the United States.

Freeze warnings were issued by the National Weather Service across the Deep South. Mississipp­i forecaster­s warned of a “long duration freeze” that would last in some locations until Thursday.

Highs of 15 or 20 degrees F (were expected across Oklahoma, Arkansas, northern Texas and western Tennessee. Louisiana and Alabama also had freeze warnings.

The winter storm was affecting travel across the central Appalachia­n region, with areas of Tennessee seeing as much as 8 inches of snow. The Tennessee legislatur­e canceled its meetings for the week.

The snow was expected to continue accumulati­ng through early Tuesday with bitter cold wind chills.

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