The Columbus Dispatch

Winter storm causes 3rd day of ice

Flights canceled; power outages across south

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AUSTIN, Texas – Bands of sleet and snow that brought traffic to a standstill across the nation’s midsection, canceled thousands of flights, left hundreds of thousands without power and were blamed for six deaths caused dangerous conditions for a third day Wednesday in several Southern states.

Watches and warnings stretched from Texas to Tennessee and Mississipp­i. Several rounds of mixed precipitat­ion, including freezing rain and sleet, were in store for many areas throughout the day, meaning some regions could be hit multiple times, forecaster­s said.

“It actually looks like it’s going to be getting worse again across Texas, it is already a pretty big area of freezing rain across western and southweste­rn Texas,” according to National Weather Service lead forecaster Bob Oravec in Camp Springs, Maryland.

Oravec said the winter weather is expected to move northeastw­ard across parts of Oklahoma and Arkansas into western Tennessee and northern Mississipp­i, before starting to end.

“By later in the day on Thursday it should be pretty much done and all the ... precipitat­ion will be well downstream across parts of the South and where it will be mostly heavy rain,” Oravec said.

More than 1,400 flights scheduled for Wednesday nationwide had already been canceled by Wednesday morning, according to the tracking service Flightawar­e. The list for cancelatio­ns included both major airports in Dallas and airports in Austin, Texas, and Nashville, Tennessee.

More than 241,000 power outages were reported in Texas, including nearly 114,000 in the the state capital of Austin, according to the website Poweroutag­e,

which tracks utility reports.

Electric Reliabilit­y Council of Texas President and CEO Pablo Vegas has vowed that the state’s electrical grid and natural gas supply will be reliable, and there would be no repeat of the February 2021 blackouts when the grid was on the brink of total failure.

As the ice and sleet enveloped Memphis, Tennessee, Memphis-shelby County Schools announced it would cancel classes Wednesday due to freezing

rain and hazardous road conditions. The school system has about 100,000 students. The National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis was also closed.

The Dallas Independen­t School District, with about 145,000 students, also canceled classes Wednesday.

Emergency responders rushed to hundreds of auto collisions across Texas on Tuesday and Republican Gov. Greg Abbott urged people not to drive. At least six people died on slick Texas

roads since Monday, including a triple fatality crash Tuesday near Brownfield, about 40 miles southwest of Lubbock, and two law officers in the state were seriously injured, authoritie­s said.

In Arkansas, Republican Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders declared a state of emergency Tuesday. Her declaratio­n cited the “likelihood of numerous downed power lines” and said road conditions have created a backlog of deliveries by commercial drivers.

 ?? SMILEY N. POOL/THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS VIA AP ?? An icy mix covers Lake Cliff Park in Dallas on Tuesday. Dallas and other parts of North Texas are under a winter storm warning that has been extended through Thursday.
SMILEY N. POOL/THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS VIA AP An icy mix covers Lake Cliff Park in Dallas on Tuesday. Dallas and other parts of North Texas are under a winter storm warning that has been extended through Thursday.

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