Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ice storm in Northwest leads to deaths

- CLAIRE RUSH Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Jim Salter, Adrian Sainz, Jonathan Mattise, Julie Walker and Carolyn Thompson of The Associated Press.

PORTLAND, Ore. — A power line fell on a parked car in northeast Portland, Ore., on Wednesday, killing three people and injuring a baby during an ice storm that turned roads and mountain highways treacherou­s in the Pacific Northwest.

Shortly before noon, dispatcher­s started receiving frantic calls about a downed power line and people appearing to be electrocut­ed, according to a statement from the city’s fire department. A branch had fallen on a power line, causing it to fall onto an SUV, the statement said.

As the chaotic situation unfolded, a resident grabbed the baby from one of the people lying in the street in a bid to save its life, according to the statement. The three killed — two adults and one teenager — were found dead upon firefighte­rs’ arrival, and the baby was taken to a hospital. It is believed the victims were electrocut­ed after they got out of the vehicle, the statement said.

The power company later deenergize­d the line, the statement added without specifying which company.

Around Portland, driving and even walking were virtually impossible as slick ice coated roads and sidewalks. Icicles dangled from roofs and cars, and ice encased branches, plants and leaves like thick glass.

A large swath of the region was under warnings Wednesday for as much as 1 inch of ice, promising only to add to the damage wrought by a deadly, powerful storm that hit over the weekend. The warning area was reduced later in the morning to parts of southwest Washington and northwest Oregon, including Portland, and further limited to the western edge of the Columbia River Gorge in the afternoon.

The three deaths Wednesday added to at least seven deaths linked to fallen trees and suspected hypothermi­a during the previous weekend’s storm.

Diane Flaherty, resident of a forested neighborho­od in southwest Portland, said her home has been without power since Saturday. That day, she left her house to stay with her brother-in-law when she saw the large tree in her front yard start swaying in the strong wind.

“It was like a war zone,” she said, describing the sound of trees cracking as they toppled onto her neighbors’ cars and homes. “We were absolutely stunned.”

Schools and government buildings closed as authoritie­s warned of icy roads and the chance of new power outages, even as crews struggled to restore electricit­y to thousands blacked out for days.

The storm hit the northwest corner of the U.S. as much of the rest of the country coped with bitter weather that in some places put electricit­y supplies at risk. Some 90,000 homes and businesses across the U.S. — mostly in Oregon — did not have power as of late Wednesday, according to PowerOutag­e.us.

Freezing temperatur­es spread as far south as north Florida on Wednesday morning, said Bob Oravec, a National Weather Service forecaster. It was 12 degrees early Wednesday in Atlanta, where thousands of students returned to school after icy weather Tuesday.

It was 5 degrees in Chicago and 6 degrees in Detroit — significan­tly colder than Alaska’s capital of Juneau, where it was 18 degrees.

In western New York, the weather was blamed for three deaths in three days. Two people were apparently stricken while clearing snow, and a third was struck by a vehicle while brushing snow from his car, officials said Wednesday.

Five people were struck and killed by a tractor-trailer on Interstate 81 in northeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia after they left their vehicles following a separate crash on slick pavement. Investigat­ors were still determinin­g the exact cause.

Heavy lake-effect snow was forecast in Buffalo, with up to 4 inches an hour expected through the afternoon. City hall was closed, school districts declared snow days, and travel bans were issued for several suburbs.

On the Crow Creek Sioux Reservatio­n near Fort Thompson, S.D., about three dozen people stayed in a shelter and the tribe paid to put up about 40 families in a motel. The tribe also provided propane and wood for home heating, and plastic to cover drafty windows, for what tribal Chairman Peter Lengkeek called “substandar­d government homes.”

It’s expensive, but “you can’t put a price on life and suffering,” Lengkeek said.

In Tennessee, health officials have confirmed at least six weather-related deaths. Memphis-Shelby County Schools, the state’s largest public school system, with about 100,000 students, canceled classes for today.

Ice storms occur as freezing rain results in dangerous accumulati­ons of ice. Freezing rain falls as water but freezes when it hits cold surfaces such as roads. It can weigh down trees and power lines, making them heavier and likelier to snap, especially in strong winds.

 ?? (AP/Gillian Flaccus) ?? Ice covers flowers on Wednesday, in Lake Oswego, Ore. An ice storm threatened to topple towering trees onto power lines and turned mountain highways treacherou­s Wednesday in the Pacific Northwest, where residents were urged to avoid travel. More photos at arkansason­line.com/118winter2­4/.
(AP/Gillian Flaccus) Ice covers flowers on Wednesday, in Lake Oswego, Ore. An ice storm threatened to topple towering trees onto power lines and turned mountain highways treacherou­s Wednesday in the Pacific Northwest, where residents were urged to avoid travel. More photos at arkansason­line.com/118winter2­4/.

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