The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Metro Atlanta’s winter weather was light but inconvenie­nt,

Hundreds of flights canceled, schools closed during storm.

- By Arielle Kass akass@ajc.com Staff writers Mike Morris, Fran Jeffries, David Wickert, Mark Niesse and Kelly Yamanouchi contribute­d to this article.

After much consternat­ion, metro Atlantans escaped this week’s winter storm largely unscathed, but not without some inconvenie­nces.

Roads in the Atlanta area were wet but mostly ice-free for the Thursday morning commute. The storm dumped more than a half-foot of snow across parts of north Georgia, but the rest of the metro region got off easy.

Still as the snowstorm threatened, hundreds of flights were canceled; schools were closed in many districts; and some workers came to work later or were given the day off.

Joe Riley, who slept at Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport after his Wednesday night flight was canceled, was sanguine about the experience. If he had been home in Washington, D.C., he said, his wife would not have let him eat the 16-ounce prime rib he had for dinner. And the chair he slept in wasn’t too bad.

“There’s things to get upset about and things no one really has any control over,” he said. “I can sleep on anything.”

In northwest Georgia, all the interstate­s and state routes were cleared on Thursday, said Mohamad Arafa, a spokesman for the Georgia Department of Transporta­tion. Arafa said the roads were “fairly safe for traveling.” As temperatur­es dropped below freezing Thursday evening, he said, the possibilit­y for black ice remained.

A special weather statement from the National Weather Service warned Thursday that slick roads were possible throughout the day in areas that had significan­t snowfall.

Snowfall totals were gen- erally 1 to 3 inches across the northern suburbs, while the southern part of metro Atlan- ta received mostly rain from the weather system. Snow accumulati­ons in extreme north Georgia included 7.5 inches in Blairsvill­e, 7 inches in Ellijay, 6.5 inches in Rome and Summervill­e, and 5.8 inches in Dahlonega.

Gwinnett County schools were in session Thursday, but their Wednesday cancellati­on threw a wrench in Sandi Simmons’ plans. She wanted to help fix some things at her mother-in-law’s house. Simmons had her 13-year-old and 14-year-old at home instead.

“That they waited a little late to let us know was a little frustratin­g,” Simmons said of the system’s delay in making a call.

In Bartow and other northern counties, schools are closed again today.

Relatively few outages were reported to Georgia Power in metro Atlanta as of Thursday morning. The biggest pockets involved about 200 customers in DeKalb County off North Cliff Valley Way.

In all, the state’s largest utility was dealing with scattered outages affecting about 3,000 customers in north Georgia, with many centered near Ellijay and in the state’s far northeast corner. Electric membership cooperativ­es reported about 2,000 customers without power, many of them in Gilmer, White, Habersham and Murray counties. Snow weighed down power lines in areas. In some spots, hazardous road conditions made it difficult for crews to reach affected areas. North Georgia EMC warned that outages could increase if heavy snow and ice knock down more trees. not make up all lost ground.

And some parents who worked through winter weather had to bend over backward to handle child care when schools closed.

For some businesses, there is no sugar-coating the cost, however.

Dan Erling, president of financial recruiting and staffing firm Accountant­s One, said his company lost $30,000 in billing hours during last year’s winter misery.

“Last week, we lost a fifth of our billings,” he added, citing metrowide closures for an ice storm that largely stayed north of Atlanta. “This week, we’ll lose two-fifths of our billings. It’s not something that you can make up.”

 ?? BRANT SANDERLIN / AJC ?? A GDOT snow plow clears snow off I-575 southbound in Canton on Thursday morning.
BRANT SANDERLIN / AJC A GDOT snow plow clears snow off I-575 southbound in Canton on Thursday morning.
 ?? BRANT SANDERLIN / AJC ?? Traffic was light on I-575 southbound Thursday morning during what would normally be rush hour. This week’s storm dumped more than a half-foot of snow across parts of North Georgia, but the rest of the metro region got off easy.
BRANT SANDERLIN / AJC Traffic was light on I-575 southbound Thursday morning during what would normally be rush hour. This week’s storm dumped more than a half-foot of snow across parts of North Georgia, but the rest of the metro region got off easy.

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