Guymon Daily Herald

Millions without power in Texas as snow storm slams US

- (AP)

AUSTIN, Texas — A frigid blast of winter weather across the U.S. plunged Texas into an unusually icy emergency Monday that knocked out power to more than 2 million people, closed dangerousl­y snowy and slick highways and put the delivery of new COVID-19 vaccine shipments on hold.

Temperatur­es nosedived into the single-digits as far south as San Antonio, and homes that had already been without electricit­y for hours had no certainty about when the lights and heat would come back on, as the state’s overwhelme­d power grid throttled into rotating blackouts that are typically only seen in 100-degree Fahrenheit (38-degree Celsius) summers.

The storm was part of a massive system that brought snow, sleet and freezing rain to the southern Plains and was spreading across the Ohio Valley and to the Northeast.

“We’re living through a really historic event going on right now,” said Jason Furtado, a professor of meteorolog­y at the University of Oklahoma, pointing to all of Texas under a winter storm warning and the extent of the freezing temperatur­es.

In Houston, where county leaders had warned that the deteriorat­ing conditions could create problems on the scale of massive hurricanes that slam the Gulf Coast, one electric provider said power may not be restored to some homes until Tuesday.

“This weather event, it’s really unpreceden­ted. We all living here know that,” said Dan Woodfin, senior director of system operations at the Electric Reliabilit­y Council of Texas. He defended preparatio­ns made by grid operators and described the demand on the system as record-setting.

“This event was well beyond the design parameters for a typical, or even an extreme, Texas winter that you would normally plan for. And so that is really the result that we’re seeing,” Woodfin said.

The largest grocery store chain in Texas, H-E-B, closed locations around Austin and San Antonio, cities that are unaccustom­ed to snow and have little resources to clear roads.

State health officials said Texas, which expected to receive more than 400,000 additional vaccine doses this week, now does not expecting deliveries to occur until at least Wednesday. “Vaccinatio­n will resume as soon as it is safe,” said Douglas Loveday, a spokesman for the Texas Department of State Health Services.

Lauren Schneider, a 24-year-old lab technician, was walking to a Dallas grocery store near her home Monday morning dressed in a coat, hat and face mask. Schneider said she didn’t feel comfortabl­e driving with the roads covered in snow and ice. She said she hadn’t seen a serious snowfall in Dallas since her childhood and was caught without enough groceries.

“I really didn’t think it’s would be this serious,” said Schneider.

Several cities in the U.S. saw record lows as Artic air remained over the central part of the country. In Minnesota, the Hibbing/ Chisholm weather station registered minus 38 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 39 degrees Celsius), while Sioux Falls, South Dakota, dropped to minus 26 Fahrenheit (minus 26 degrees Celsius).

In Kansas, where wind chills dropped to as low as minus 30 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 34 degrees Celsius) in some areas, Gov. Laura Kelly declared a state of disaster.

Most government offices and schools were closed for Presidents Day, and authoritie­s pleaded with residents to stay home. Louisiana State Police reported that it had investigat­ed nearly 75 weather-related crashes caused by a mixture of snow, sleet and freezing rain in the past 24 hours.

“We already have some accidents on our roadways,” Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said during a morning news conference. “It is slick and it is dangerous.”

Air travel was also affected. By midmorning, 3,000 flights had been canceled across the country, about 1,600 of them at Dallas/ Fort Worth Internatio­nal and Bush Interconti­nental airports in Texas. At DFW, the temperatur­e was 4 degrees Fahrenheit (-15 degrees Celsius) — 3 degrees (-16 degrees) colder than Moscow.

The storm arrived over a three-day holiday weekend that has seen the most U.S. air travel since the period around New Year’s. More

than 1 million people went through airport security checkpoint­s on Thursday and Friday. However, that was still less

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