The Boston Globe

National Guard searches for storm victims in Buffalo

- By Carolyn Thompson and Jennifer Peltz

BUFFALO, N.Y. — The National Guard went door to door in parts of Buffalo on Wednesday to check on people who lost power during the area’s deadliest winter storm in decades, and authoritie­s faced the tragic possibilit­y of finding more victims amid melting snow.

Already, more than 30 deaths have been reported in western New York from the blizzard that raged Friday and Saturday across much of the country, with Buffalo in its crosshairs.

Carolyn Eubanks, who relied on an oxygen machine, collapsed after losing electricit­y at her Buffalo home during a time when emergency workers were unable to respond to calls, son Antwaine Parker told The Buffalo News.

“She’s like, ‘I can’t go no further.’ I’m begging her, ‘Mom, just stand up.’ She fell in my arms and never spoke another word,” Parker told the newspaper.

Parker and his stepbrothe­r knocked on nearby doors, seeking help. They found it when a stranger, David Purdy, answered and helped them carry the 63-year-old Eubanks inside and try in vain to revive her. Purdy and his fiancee sheltered her body until first responders arrived the next day.

“I done it as respectful as I could,” Purdy told The Buffalo News.

Timothy Murphy, 27, died after snow covered a furnace and sent carbon monoxide into his Lockport home, the Niagara County sheriff’s office said. Monique Alexander, 52, was found buried in snow after going out in the storm for unclear reasons, her daughter told The Buffalo News.

Anndel Taylor, 22, died in her car after it got stuck on her way home from work, her family told WSOC-TV.

As a deep freeze eased into milder weather Wednesday and the number of lingering outages dwindled, New York National Guard members knocked on doors in Buffalo and its suburbs.

“We are fearful that there are individual­s who may have perished, living alone, or people who are not doing well,” said Erie County Executive Mark Poloncarz said. The county encompasse­s Buffalo.

One pair of National Guard troops, clipboard in hand, knocked on the door of a home as people nearby tried to dig their way to businesses on a major avenue in Buffalo.

Twenty-five Guard teams were making such rounds Wednesday, spokespers­on Eric Durr said by phone.

He said troops had made some wellness checks previously but went out with a specific list of questions, including whether residents had food, water, electricit­y, or any special health or medication concerns.

Buffalo Police Commission­er Joseph Gramaglia said officers from his and other agencies also were searching for victims, sometimes using officers’ personal snowmobile­s, trucks, and other equipment.

With the death toll already surpassing that of the area’s notorious Blizzard of 1977, local officials faced questions about the response to last week’s storm.

They insisted that they had prepared but that the weather was extraordin­ary even for a region prone to powerful winter storms.

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