Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Virginia motorists stranded all night

- Ryan W. Miller

Ice and snow stranded hundreds of drivers on Interstate 95 in Virginia into Tuesday after a winter storm pounded the mid-Atlantic and dumped more than a foot of snow in some places.

The storm left more than 300,000 without power in Virginia and Maryland and caused at least five deaths across three states.

No injuries or fatalities were reported in Virginia due to the storm or the traffic backup.

On a roughly 50-mile stretch of I-95 near Fredericks­burg, drivers were stuck in their cars overnight while ice blanketed the freeway. The Virginia Department of Transporta­tion tweeted Tuesday that the stretch of the interstate remained closed.

Transporta­tion Department engineer Marcie Parker said the agency expected to finish clearing the interstate by Tuesday night, so it would be open for the Wednesday morning rush hour.

On social media, people shared their experience­s waiting out the jam as they sat for hours without moving. Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., said Tuesday morning he remained in the standstill for 19 hours on his way to Washington. Others said drivers got out of their cars and were worried about food.

Josh Lederman, a reporter with NBC News, tweeted that he was stuck in his car overnight and many motorists turned off their cars to conserve gas.

“People (myself included) are taking exercise breaks outside their cars, walking their dogs on the interstate. I’ve been putting snow in his bowl and letting it melt into water,” he tweeted.

Meera Rao and her husband, Raghavendr­a, were driving home from visiting their daughter in North Carolina when they got stuck Monday evening. They were only 100 feet past an exit but could not move for roughly 16 hours.

“Not one police (officer) came in the 16 hours we were stuck,” she said. “No one came. It was just shocking. Being in the most advanced country in the world, no one knew how to even clear one lane for all of us to get out of that mess?”

Downed trees and black ice remained major issues for much of the state Tuesday morning, said Corinne Geller, a spokespers­on for the state police.

“We know many travelers have been stuck on Interstate 95 in our region for extraordin­ary periods of time over the past 24 hours, in some cases since Monday morning. This is unpreceden­ted, and we continue to steadily move stopped trucks to make progress toward restoring lanes,” Parker said in statement.

State police responded to more than 1,000 traffic crashes and assisted more than 1,000 motorists, Alena Yarmosky, spokespers­on for Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, said in a statement.

“While sunlight is expected to help VDOT treat and clear roads, all Virginians must continue to avoid the interstate and follow directions of emergency personnel,” she said.

The winter storm blanketed parts of

Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey, North Carolina, Pennsylvan­ia, Tennessee and Kentucky.

Schools across multiple states remained closed Tuesday, and about 240,000 customers in Virginia and 25,000 in Maryland were without power as of 1 p.m., according to the online tracker Poweroutag­e.us.

Snowfall totals in the Washington area were half a foot to a foot, according to the National Weather Service.

More than 15 inches of snow fell in Huntingtow­n, Maryland, the highest total in the state, about 40 miles southeast of Washington. Glendie, north of Fredericks­burg, recorded more than 14 inches of snow, the highest total in Virginia, according to the Weather Service.

Five deaths due to the weather were reported. A 7-year-old girl died after heavy snow led to a tree falling on a home in Townsend, Tennessee, about 30 miles southeast of Knoxville, WVLT reported.

A 5-year-old boy in Georgia was killed after heavy rain and strong wind gusts caused a tree to fall on a home near Atlanta in DeKalb County, according to CBS 46.

Three more people died when an SUV and snowplow collided in Montgomery County, Maryland, NBC reported.

Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser declared a snow emergency Monday and advised residents to stay home. President Joe Biden, who was returning to the White House from Delaware, had his helicopter grounded by snow and traveled by motorcade from Joint Base Andrews in Maryland.

 ?? WJLA PHOTOS VIA AP ?? Hundreds of motorists were stranded all night in snow and freezing temperatur­es along a 50-mile stretch of Interstate 95 after a crash involving six tractor-trailers in Virginia.
WJLA PHOTOS VIA AP Hundreds of motorists were stranded all night in snow and freezing temperatur­es along a 50-mile stretch of Interstate 95 after a crash involving six tractor-trailers in Virginia.

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