Los Angeles Times

Deep South, deep freeze

Another winter storm descends on the region, disrupting flights and roadways.

- By Jenny Jarvie and Molly Hennessy-Fiske molly.hennessy-fiske @latimes.com Special correspond­ent Jarvie reported from Atlanta and Times staff writer Hennessy-Fiske from Pecos, Texas.

ATLANTA — People across the Deep South hunkered down Tuesday as yet another frigid winter storm blanketed the region in snow, sleet and ice, shutting down interstate­s, canceling flights and prompting officials to close schools and government offices.

Before dawn, flurries of snow fell across parts of Texas, Louisiana and Tennessee, causing traffic pileups and the terminatio­n of thousands of flights. In Houston, nearly 800 flights were canceled at George Bush Interconti­nental Airport, more than half of the airport’s daily schedule. In Atlanta, more than 250 flights were canceled at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport.

The National Weather Service issued a gust of winter weather warnings and advisories across a vast swath of the U.S. from Texas to Massachuse­tts.

In Houston, city officials activated an emergency operations center and started referring residents to churches converted into “warming centers.” By afternoon, one church was filled with 100 people, said Michael Walter, an emergency operations spokesman.

“We’re not like Philadelph­ia or New York, who deal with this regularly. We have limited resources,” Walter said.

No deaths had been reported, but Walter said officials were concerned about the homeless and those still rebuilding after Hurricane Harvey.

“There are still homes that have drywall missing, insulation missing, people who may not have working heaters,” he said.

Even a light snowstorm can generate panic across the Southeast. Four years ago, just 2 inches of snow led to “Snowmagedd­on” in Atlanta and Birmingham, Ala., as traffic gridlock prevented plows and salt trucks from clearing roads and interstate­s. Thousands of students were stranded in schools and motorists were stuck on icy highways overnight.

Already this winter, the Southeast has endured several bouts of frigid weather. In early December, a storm dumped snow as far south as Brownsvill­e, Texas, and in parts of Louisiana, Mississipp­i, Alabama, Georgia and the southern Appalachia­ns.

Two weeks ago, another winter storm scattered snow as far south as Tallahasse­e, Fla.

“It’s been a cold winter,” said Keith Stellman, meteorolog­ist in charge at the National Weather Service in Atlanta, noting that Wednesday’s likely high temperatur­e — 29 degrees — was about 20 degrees below normal.

Forecaster­s did not predict a heavy snowfall — up to 2 inches in Alabama, where Gov. Kay Ivey declared a state of emergency and activated the National Guard. Dozens of school systems across the state closed, and businesses and government offices shut down in preparatio­n for the storm.

“This winter storm could be debilitati­ng to the state for a couple of days due to icy conditions,” Brian Hastings, director of the Alabama Emergency Management Agency, said in a statement. He urged Alabamians to closely monitor weather forecasts and get off roads before the first flakes of snow touched the ground.

By noon, officials in Limestone County, just east of Huntsville in northern Alabama, reported that all roads — apart from those in the city of Athens — were impassable.

Residents were not used to driving in such treacherou­s conditions, said Daphne Ellison, an emergency management officer in Limestone County, noting the weather had caused multiple traffic pileups and accidents.

“Oh, my goodness, people just sliding off the roads,” she said. “You know how it is. People don’t know how to slow down. They’re just not paying attention.”

Ellison, expressing frustratio­n that people insisted on driving, added: “It’s rough out there. We’re not used to 6-degree weather, but I think people get cabin fever and don’t want to stay in the house.”

In Louisiana, the National Weather Service in New Orleans expanded its winter weather advisory to include locations as far southeast as Houma and metro New Orleans. In the Shreveport area, both lanes of Interstate 49 were closed early Tuesday.

In Kentucky, all southbound lanes of Interstate 65 were closed after multiple people were injured in a collision involving a Greyhound bus, two commercial vehicles and two passenger cars.

In Texas, the weather was so cold that Gov. Greg Abbott postponed an event in Arlington to announce his plan to rein in property taxes in the state. In a statement, he warned of “life-threatenin­g situations,” and added, “I urge all Texans to exercise extreme caution in these hazardous conditions.”

Conservati­onists sprang to the aid of sea turtles in frozen waters off the Texas coast, said Melissa Angel, a spokeswoma­n for the Turtle Island Restoratio­n Network. The California-based nonprofit has an office in Galveston, and volunteers already helped rescue about 2,500 turtles during a cold snap earlier this month.

“Most of these turtles have probably left the bay, but there are probably some out there,” said Joanie Steinhaus, the group’s Gulf of Mexico program director. “It’s pretty raw conditions.”

The storm was particular­ly challengin­g for areas of southeast Texas still recovering from Hurricane Harvey.

Houston’s Zoo was closed but prepared for the storm, a spokeswoma­n said.

“The zoo animals are safe and secure in their warm night houses and barns,” Jackie Wallace said. “Where necessary, extra hay for bedding is given to the animals, and in some areas, the facilities are wrapped to give additional insulation.”

 ?? Henrietta Wildsmith Shreveport Times ?? EMILY MASSEY pulls her daughter, Maggie, through the snow at Betty Virginia Park in Shreveport, La. In Alabama, the governor declared a state of emergency and activated the National Guard.
Henrietta Wildsmith Shreveport Times EMILY MASSEY pulls her daughter, Maggie, through the snow at Betty Virginia Park in Shreveport, La. In Alabama, the governor declared a state of emergency and activated the National Guard.
 ?? Ralph Barrera Austin American-Statesman ?? CARSON MONAHAN scrapes a layer of ice off the windshield of his delivery truck in Austin, Texas.
Ralph Barrera Austin American-Statesman CARSON MONAHAN scrapes a layer of ice off the windshield of his delivery truck in Austin, Texas.

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