The Oklahoman

Deadly cold disrupts US, including the South

- BY TAMMY WEBBER

INDIANAPOL­IS —

Dangerousl­y cold temperatur­es blamed for at least nine deaths have wreaked havoc across a wide swath of the U.S., freezing a water tower in Iowa, halting ferry service in New York and leading officials to open warming centers even in the Deep South.

The National Weather Service issued wind chill advisories and freeze warnings Tuesday covering a vast area from South Texas to Canada and from Montana through New England.

Indianapol­is early Tuesday tied a record low of minus 12 degrees Fahrenheit for Jan. 2 set in 1887, leading Indianapol­is Public Schools to cancel classes. And the northwest Indiana city of Lafayette got down to minus 19, shattering the previous record of minus 5 for the date, set in 1979, the National Weather Service said.

After residents there began complainin­g of a hum, Duke Energy said it was caused by extra power surging through utility lines to meet electricit­y demands.

“The temperatur­es are certainly extreme, but we’ve seen colder,” said Joseph Nield, a meteorolog­ist in Indianapol­is, noting that the all-time low temperatur­e in Indiana was minus 36 in 1994.

Neverthele­ss, the cold is nothing to trifle with, forecaster­s warned.

With Chicago-area wind chills expected between minus 35 and minus 20 degrees, forecaster­s warned of frost bite and hypothermi­a risks and urged residents to take precaution­s, including dressing in layers, wearing a hat and gloves, covering exposed skin and bringing pets indoors.

In Tennessee, correction­s officials at a maximum security prison were using portable heaters and extra blankets to keep inmates and employees warm. The facility lost hot water pressure Monday, causing its boiler to go offline.

A spokeswoma­n didn’t provide a timeline for its return.

Atlanta hospitals were seeing a surge in emergency room visits for hypothermi­a and other ailments as temperatur­es plunge well below freezing.

The temperatur­e in Atlanta fell to 13 degrees before dawn Tuesday.

“We have a group of patients who are coming in off the street who are looking to escape the cold — we have dozens and dozens of those every day,” said Dr. Brooks Moore, associate medical director in the emergency department of Grady Health System, which operates Georgia’s largest hospital in Atlanta.

The cold is blamed in at least nine deaths in the past week.

Police in St. Louis said a homeless man found dead inside a trash bin Monday evening apparently froze to death as the temperatur­e dropped to negative 6 degrees (-21 Celsius). Sheriff’s officials in Fond du Lac County, Wisconsin, said a 27-year-old woman whose body was found Monday evening on the shore of Lake Winnebago likely died of exposure.

The Milwaukee County Medical Examiner’s Office said two men whose bodies were found Sunday showed signs of hypothermi­a. Police believe the cold weather also may have been a factor in the death of a man in Bismarck, North Dakota, whose body was found near a river.

Warming shelters were opened across the South as freeze watches and warnings blanketed the region, including hard freeze warnings for much of Louisiana, Mississipp­i and Alabama. Temperatur­es fell to 8 degrees (-13 Celsius) near Cullman, Alabama, and 20 degrees (-7 Celsius) in Mobile, Alabama. Georgia saw one of its coldest temperatur­es of the winter: 2 degrees (-17 Celsius) shortly before dawn at a U.S. Forest Service weather station at Toccoa, Georgia.

Plunging overnight temperatur­es in Texas brought rare snow flurries as far south as Austin, and accidents racked up on icy roads across the state. In the central Texas city of Abilene, the local police chief said more than three dozen vehicle crashes were reported in 24 hours.

 ??  ?? Sherlin Galicia, left, Alexander Galicia, center, and Heidi Galicia play on the iced-over pond Tuesday at Overton Park in Memphis, Tenn. The ice has grown a couple of inches thick on the pond after several nights of sub-freezing temperatur­es.
Sherlin Galicia, left, Alexander Galicia, center, and Heidi Galicia play on the iced-over pond Tuesday at Overton Park in Memphis, Tenn. The ice has grown a couple of inches thick on the pond after several nights of sub-freezing temperatur­es.
 ?? [AP PHOTOS] ?? With her breath frosting up in the sub-freezing temperatur­es, one of the Memphis Zoo’s African lions chills out Tuesday morning in Mephis, Tenn.
[AP PHOTOS] With her breath frosting up in the sub-freezing temperatur­es, one of the Memphis Zoo’s African lions chills out Tuesday morning in Mephis, Tenn.

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