Kane Republican

Winter storm cancels flights, keeps thousands without power

- By Paul J.weber and Ken Miller

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — A mess of ice, sleet and snow lingered across much of the southern U.S. on Thursday as thousands in Texas endured freezing temperatur­es with no power, including many in the state capital of Austin, but a warming trend was forecast to bring relief from the deadly storm that is blamed for at least 10 traffic fatalities in three states.

Hundreds more flights were canceled again in Texas, although not as many as in previous days. But another wave of frigid weather in the U.S. is on the horizon, with an Arctic cold front expected to move from Canada into the northern Plains and Upper Midwest and sweep into the Northeast by Friday. The front is expected to bring snow and wind chills lower than minus 50 (minus 45 Celsius) to northern New England, according to the National Weather Service.

Nearly 430,000 customers in Texas lacked power early Thursday, according to Poweroutag­e, a website tracking utility reports.

The outages were most widespread in Austin, where frustratio­n mounted among more than 156,000 customers, over 24 hours after their electricit­y and heat went out. For many, it was the second time in three years that a February deep freeze caused prolonged outages and uncertaint­y over when the lights would come back on.

Unlike the 2021 blackouts in Texas, when hundreds of people died after the state's grid was pushedto the brink of total failure because of a lack of generation, the outages in Austin this time were largely the result of frozen equipment and trees falling on power lines. The city's utility warned all power may not be restored until Friday as ice continued causing new outages, even as repairs were finished elsewhere.

“It feels like two steps forward and three steps back,” said Jackie Sargent, general manager of Austin Energy.

School systems in the

Dallas and Austin area, plus many in Oklahoma, Arkansas and Memphis, Tennessee, closed Thursday as snow, sleet and freezing rain continued to push through. Public transporta­tion in Dallas also experience­d “major delays” early Thursday, according to a statement from Dallas Area Rapid Transit.

Airport crews battled ice to keep runways open. By Thursday morning, airlines had canceled more than 500 flights at Dallas-fort Worth Internatio­nal Airport — more than a quarter of all flights scheduled for the day. Still, that was down from about 1,300 cancellati­ons on Wednesday and more than 1,000 on Tuesday, according to Flightawar­e.com.

Dozens more flights Thursday were canceled at Dallas Love Field and Austin-bergstrom Internatio­nal Airport.

Watches and warnings about wintry conditions stretched from the West Texas border with Mexico through Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisiana and into western Tennessee and northern Mississipp­i. And in a briefing Thursday with the federal Weather

Prediction Center, New Englanders were warned that wind chills — the combined effect of wind and cold air on exposed skin — in the minus 50s “could be the coldest felt in decades.”

The strong winds and cold air will create wind chills “rarely seen in northern and eastern Maine,” according to an advisory from the National Weather Service office in Caribou, Maine.

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