The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

DEEP FREEZE

Winter-weary U.S. braces for more record-setting cold

- By John Seewer

The glow of a white Christmas is long gone. Now it’s just winter across much of the Midwest and East Coast, where bitter temperatur­es and snow squalls have been blamed for a handful of deaths and canceled a long list of New Year’s celebratio­ns.

Already winter-weary parts of the nation are dealing with a mounting number of weather-related headaches, from highway pileups to frozen pipes and a rash of car thefts.

Icy roadways in central Michigan caused more 30 crashes on highways near Flint on Friday morning. Coastal South Carolina saw a rare bout of freezing rain and drizzle on Friday that forced bridges from Charleston to Myrtle Beach to shut down for de-icing.

Police in the Cincinnati area say a half-dozen cars have been stolen in recent days after being left running unattended by owners trying to warm them up. Cincinnati police warned in a Tweet that leaving your car running means “the only person who will be warm is the thief who stole your car.”

More snow is on the way in Erie, Pennsylvan­ia, where 65 inches have fallen since Christmas Eve. Now parts of the surroundin­g county could get up to 16 inches of more snow by Sunday.

A call center set up to help people dig out has been over-

whelmed. “The phones have been ringing off the hook,” said Josh Jaeger, a coordinato­r for the center told the Erie Times-News.

The drawn-out deep freeze is continuing across Pennsylvan­ia, bringing more snow for previously pummeled Erie and possibly postponing Philadelph­ia’s flamboyant New Year’s Day parade due to bone-chilling temperatur­es.

A lake-effect snow warning is in place for Erie from Friday morning through early Sunday, bringing with it possibly a foot of snow.

Dave Mulvihill, Erie’s public works director, tells the Erie Times-News that’s “nothing” compared to the more than 5 feet the city had to deal with earlier this week.

The same front will bring snow to a swath of the state from west to east overnight.

In Philadelph­ia, officials are taking a wait-andsee approach to whether they should hold the annual Mummers Parade. A high of 19 is expected New Year’s Day.

The parade features thousands of performers dressed in colorful costumes adorned with sequins and feathers marching down the city’s main north-south thoroughfa­re.

Cleanup continued inside Michigan State University’s basketball arena after a frozen water pipe burst and flooded a hallway, but the mess wasn’t expected to interrupt a game Friday.

Several deaths have been linked to the wintry weather during the past week.

In South Dakota, an 83-year-old woman died from exposure to the cold after she crashed her car and then got out to look for help. Search crews found her body in a ditch on Sunday. Three people were found dead in a canal along Lake Erie earlier this week after their car slid off an icy road.

The National Weather Service predicts another blast of arctic air will chill much of the eastern two-thirds of the U.S. through the weekend and into 2018.

Temperatur­es could fall into the single digits as far south as Oklahoma and sink to zero or below Friday night in Nebraska and Iowa and remain there for at least three days.

“It’s pretty unusual to get that long of a streak where it’s completely below zero,” said Iowa’s State Climatolog­ist Harry Hillaker. “Historical­ly, that doesn’t happen very often in Des Moines.”

The Pacific Northwest and northern Rockies were bracing for storms that forecaster­s warned could bring several feet of mountain snow and freezing rain.

With the bitter cold expected to stick around, many New Year’s Eve plans are being scuttled.

Shore towns in New Jersey canceled plans for polar bear plunges in the Atlantic Ocean and organizers pulled the plug on the annual light bulb drop in Sunbury, Pennsylvan­ia.

Fireworks shows have been called off in Omaha, Nebraska and at Six Flags Great Adventure in New Jersey. And New York City’s Coney Island says it will be too cold for free rides on the Wonder Wheel and Thunderbol­t roller coaster.

Animal advocates urged people to protect their pets from the cold. Wild animals weren’t immune from the dangers of winter either.

In Ohio, wildlife officers mulled how to rescue a deer whose legs were stuck in an ice-covered river. They managed to lasso the deer with a rope and pull it to shore Friday, but they later had to euthanize the injured animal.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A pedestrian crosses the street as the temperatur­e hovers in the single-digits in downtown Boston. The National Weather Service said there’s the potential for record-breaking cold this week in New England.
ASSOCIATED PRESS A pedestrian crosses the street as the temperatur­e hovers in the single-digits in downtown Boston. The National Weather Service said there’s the potential for record-breaking cold this week in New England.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A family braves temperatur­es in the teens as they make their way to the National Museum of African American History and Culture on the National Mall in Washington.
ASSOCIATED PRESS A family braves temperatur­es in the teens as they make their way to the National Museum of African American History and Culture on the National Mall in Washington.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Logan Rogers pushes his bike along East Third Street in Erie. Freezing temperatur­es and below-zero wind chills socked much of the northern United States and the snowharden­ed city of Erie, dug out from a record snowfall.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Logan Rogers pushes his bike along East Third Street in Erie. Freezing temperatur­es and below-zero wind chills socked much of the northern United States and the snowharden­ed city of Erie, dug out from a record snowfall.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Chelse Volgyes clears snow from her car in Erie. The city is trying to dig out of a record snowfall of 65 inches this week.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Chelse Volgyes clears snow from her car in Erie. The city is trying to dig out of a record snowfall of 65 inches this week.

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