Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Snowy Northeast digs out; South starts storm cleanup

Midwest caught in middle of messy, sprawling system

- By Bruce Schreiner, David Sharp and Corey Williams

The winter-weary Northeast and upper Midwest were digging out Saturday from heavy snowfall while cleanup began in battered parts of the South and Midwest after a sprawling storm system produced ferocious winds that left widespread damage and caused multiple deaths.

Snow fell across a large swath of the Northeast, from western New York to New England, with some areas expecting more than a foot of snow Saturday. The mix of snow, sleet and rain prompted the National Weather Service to warn of possible coastal flooding in Massachuse­tts and Rhode Island.

The storm could bring as much as 18 inches of snow to parts of New Hampshire and Maine. It also could deliver strong winds that could cause power outages.

Hundreds of businesses were closed, many flights were canceled and some bus service was suspended. The heavy, wet snow was accompanie­d by winds gusting to 40 to 50 mph, raising concerns about toppled trees and power outages, said meteorolog­ist Jon Palmer with the National Weather Service in Maine.

In the upper Midwest, residents dug out Saturday from heavy snowfall that caused widespread power outages and forced Detroit’s Metropolit­an Wayne County Airport to briefly close late Friday. Passengers were advised to check with airlines for flight delays Saturday.

An Indiana state trooper was struck by a vehicle and killed Friday afternoon while assisting other troopers with traffic backups following weather-related crashes.

Master Trooper James Bailey, 50, was hit while deploying stop sticks on Interstate 69 near Auburn to stop a speeding vehicle fleeing Fort Wayne police, state police said. Bailey later died at a hospital. He had spent more than 15 years with the state police. A 42-year-old Marion, Indiana, man was arrested and faces a charge of resisting law enforcemen­t causing death to a law enforcemen­t officer.

In Michigan, an 80-yearold man was struck and killed Friday evening while clearing snow from a driveway in Ann Arbor by a snowplow that was backing up, MLive.com reported. The snowplow driver said he didn’t know he had struck the man until a bystander got his attention, police said.

The sprawling storm system spawned straightli­ne winds, possible tornadoes and powerful thundersto­rms in the South on Friday.

At least five deaths were reported in hardhit Kentucky, Gov. Andy Beshear said Saturday. The storm, with wind gusts surpassing 70 mph, downed trees and power lines and damaged homes and other buildings.

“This is very significan­t, widespread damage throughout Kentucky,” Beshear said.

In central Tennessee, where the severe weather took down power lines and damaged homes, at least two deaths were blamed on the storm. In both cases, the victims were struck by falling trees, authoritie­s told

local news outlets.

About 780,000 utility customers in Kentucky, Tennessee and Michigan were without power, according to PowerOutag­e. us. More than 350,000 of those customers were in Kentucky, and the governor warned it would take days for utility crews to fully restore service.

Kentucky’s electric cooperativ­es reported hundreds of snapped utility poles and thousands of power lines down across the Bluegrass State. Soft ground from heavy rains slowed the progress of heavy equipment to access damaged infrastruc­ture.

At the height of the windstorm, more than 300,000 consumer-members lost power in Kentucky, the co-ops said. By early Saturday afternoon, about 148,000 members remained without power.

“The damage from this event is as widespread as any natural disaster I have ever seen in Kentucky co-op history,” said Chris Perry, president and CEO of Kentucky Electric Cooperativ­es.

In Alabama, a 70-yearold man sitting in his truck in Talledega County was killed when a tree fell onto

his vehicle. A 43-year-old man in Lauderdale County and a man in Huntsville also were killed by falling trees Friday, local authoritie­s said. Heavy rain caused flooding in southern Missouri and northern Arkansas.

The storm system previously slammed California with as much as 10 feet of snow. Search crews have rescued several California­ns stranded in the state’s mountain communitie­s, and some residents east of Los Angeles will likely remain cut off in their homes for at least another week after the snowfall proved too much to handle for most plows.

 ?? JAKE MAY/THE FLINT JOURNAL ?? Boris Yakubchik clears his driveway with a shovel Saturday in Lapeer, Mich., after a heavy snowstorm dropped a recorded 9 inches of snow overnight.
JAKE MAY/THE FLINT JOURNAL Boris Yakubchik clears his driveway with a shovel Saturday in Lapeer, Mich., after a heavy snowstorm dropped a recorded 9 inches of snow overnight.

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