San Antonio Express-News

Winter storm causes dozens of wrecks in Tenn., Ky.

- By Jonathan Mattise

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — A winter storm blanketed parts of the South with snow, freezing rain and sleet Thursday, tying up roads in Tennessee and Kentucky as the system tracked a path through Appalachia toward the mid-atlantic and Northeast.

The storm began hitting greater Nashville on Thursday morning. About 4 to 6 inches of snow had fallen across a large swath of middle Tennessee by early afternoon, with snowfall possibly continuing for a few more hours, said National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Scott Unger in Nashville. Freezing rain and sleet coated areas around the Tennessee-alabama state border, Unger said.

Authoritie­s urged people to travel only when necessary, as Metro Nashville Police reported accidents and other driving woes that snarled and slowed several roads. Police in the city reported dozens of wrecks on the road by the early afternoon. A section of Interstate 40 was plugged up due to a tractor-trailer fuel spill crash, according to police, just one of several issues causing bottleneck­s on multiple interstate­s in the city.

Along the Kentucky border, authoritie­s in Montgomery County, Tennessee, were dealing with dozens of crashes as well, including a wreck that killed one person involving a commercial vehicle on Interstate 24, according to Tennessee Highway Patrol spokespers­on Lt. Bill Miller.

Tennessee Department of Transporta­tion regional spokespers­on Rebekah Hammonds tweeted Thursday that the agency

is “clearing as much as we can but issues will continue as snow continues to fall and temps drop.”

With temperatur­es expected to plummet overnight, everything on the ground is going to freeze and create treacherou­s road conditions Friday, Unger said.

Schools across Tennessee canceled classes and government­s temporaril­y closed their buildings as far west as Memphis and Shelby County, which saw a dose of ice and snow. Gov. Bill Lee shuttered state offices across Tennessee. Nashville and Memphis both saw their share of canceled flights at their airports.

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear warned that the snow hitting his state was “both real and dangerous.” Some areas had already received more than a half-foot by early afternoon, National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Ron Steve said. Beshear said he deployed teams of the Kentucky National Guard to help in the response.

The largest snowfall so far was 7 to 8 inches around Elizabetht­own. Lexington had 4 to 5 inches, Steve said. Far western Kentucky had about 3 inches, and snowfall was tapering off.

In Elizabetht­own, officials said

a pileup of 20 to 30 cars in snowy conditions Thursday afternoon closed both lanes of the Western Kentucky Parkway. And both lanes of U.S. Route 25 in southcentr­al Kentucky were temporaril­y blocked by multiple crashes, state police said.

The storm’s path could create further headaches as it swirls through the mid-atlantic and the Northeast.

In Virginia, work was underway both to prepare for the expected snow and mitigate the effects of a winter storm earlier in the week that left hundreds of drivers stranded on Interstate 95.

Gov. Ralph Northam declared a state of emergency and tapped the Virginia National Guard for some additional help.

The Washington and Baltimore areas, parts of central and southern Maryland, and portions of northern Virginia should expect 2 to 4 inches of snow overnight Thursday into Friday morning, with isolated high amounts up to 6 inches, the National Weather Service said.

Massachuse­tts was bracing for 8 inches or more from 2022’s first snowstorm, and as a precaution, many state workers have been told to stay home Friday.

From late Thursday through Friday afternoon, 4 to 7 inches of snow were expected in parts of central and southern New Hampshire, and south-central and southwest Maine, according to the weather service.

In Michigan, meanwhile, snow fueled by the Great Lakes fell for a second consecutiv­e day Thursday in the western part of the state and the Upper Peninsula, with some communitie­s reporting remarkable amounts and bracing for even more by Friday.

Ishpeming recorded 23 inches in one location, while many other areas in the Upper Peninsula had a foot or more, the National Weather Service said.

In North Dakota, dangerousl­y frigid weather presented the biggest risk Thursday. Cold temperatur­es enveloping the state have pushed wind chill readings down to minus 59 degrees in Bowbells, the county seat of Burke County in northweste­rn North Dakota. Mandan was at minus 45 and Bismarck at 41 below zero, according to the National Weather Service.

 ?? George Walker IV /The Tennessean via AP ?? Clyde Vaughn enjoys sledding at a park Thursday in Nashville, Tenn., as a winter storm prompted schools to close. Roads are expected to become even more treacherou­s as they freeze overnight.
George Walker IV /The Tennessean via AP Clyde Vaughn enjoys sledding at a park Thursday in Nashville, Tenn., as a winter storm prompted schools to close. Roads are expected to become even more treacherou­s as they freeze overnight.

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