Las Vegas Review-Journal

South working its way out of icy blast

Experts question why region was unprepared

- By Jonathan Drew and Tom Foreman Jr. The Associated Press

DURHAM, N.C. — Southerner­s shoveled, scraped and plowed their way Thursday out of a snowy deep freeze that caused a standstill across much of a region accustomed to mild winters.

At least 15 people died, including a baby in a car that slid off an icy overpass outside New Orleans, and a 6-year-old boy who sledded onto a roadway in Virginia.

Authoritie­s across the South urged drivers to stay off treacherou­s roads. Louisiana highways remained closed and New Orleans residents were avoiding showers to restore pressure to a system plagued by frozen pipes. Atlanta was slowly returning to normal after being frozen in its tracks by about an inch of snow.

All this raises a familiar question: Why do severe winters seem to catch southerner­s unprepared? Experts on disaster planning say it’s tough to justify maintainin­g fleets of snow plows when the weather’s only occasional­ly nasty.

“People are putting their money, their resources and their planning time where it’s most necessary, and that has to do with an understand­ing of what the risks are in any place,” said Dr. Irwin Redlener, director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedne­ss at Columbia University.

Still, “if you get even a modest amount of snow, you can’t be caught completely unprepared for that either,” he said.

North Carolina is accustomed to getting some snow, but people were surprised at the ferocity of this storm, which dumped as much as an inch per hour from the mountains to the coast and piled a foot of snow in parts of Durham County.

Mark Foley, 24, struggled to start his pickup in the 15-degree air before he was able to go pick up an in-home health aide for his disabled father.

“My lock was frozen, so I couldn’t even unlock the door. So I had to use some warm water,” he said. “It’s more snow than we thought we were going to get.”

State transporta­tion officials had 2,200 trucks out plowing and salting a day after the storm hit. Despite this, troopers responded to more than 2,700 crashes and police reported hundreds more as North Carolina’s five most populous cities all saw significan­t snow.

 ?? Gray Whitley ?? City of New Bern Public Works staff clear streets of ice and snow Thursday in downtown New Bern, N.C. The Associated Press
Gray Whitley City of New Bern Public Works staff clear streets of ice and snow Thursday in downtown New Bern, N.C. The Associated Press

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States