USA TODAY International Edition

East slammed with ice, snow

20 million under watches as more is on the way

- John Bacon

ARLINGTON, Va. – A brutal winter storm that dumped up to 20 inches of snow in the Midwest last week roared east Sunday, slamming some areas with up to a half-inch of ice while paralyzing the nation’s capital with several inches of snow.

Three deaths were reported in Missouri, two in Kansas and one in Virginia. More than 20 million people from Ohio to the East Coast remained under winter storm advisories or warnings late Sunday, the National Weather Service said.

In Washington, more than 5 inches of snow fell in and around the city – and more was on the way. AccuWeathe­r meteorolog­ist Tyler Roys said a high-pressure system was keeping the snow from heading north, forcing it to remain in the D.C. area. The total could reach 8 inches before the snow ends early Monday.

By Sunday night, the Federal Aviation Administra­tion had ordered ground stops at both Dulles Internatio­nal Airport and Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.

In suburban Arlington, Virginia, Aliya Jiwani was bundling her two daughters to play in the snow while worrying about the fate of a Monday morning flight to Chicago.

“I tried to fly out during some snow last month – and it was a bit of a disaster,” she said. “So far my flight tomorrow is on schedule, but if we get more snow, who knows?”

Her concerns were valid. Nationwide, more than 600 flights had been canceled and another 913 delayed Sunday as of 11 a.m. ET, according to flighttracki­ng service FlightAwar­e.

At Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Internatio­nal Airport, Delta Flight 1708 arrived Sunday from Las Vegas and, after landing safely, slid off the pavement of a taxiway on its way to the terminal, airport officials said. No injuries were reported among the 126 passengers and crew.

In North Carolina, ice was the issue. Some areas were hit with a half-inch of ice, which knocked down trees and power lines and made roads hazardous. Almost 200,000 homes and businesses were without power across the state at the peak of the outages. Repair crews were out, however, and the number was falling later in the day.

Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam had declared a state of emergency in anticipati­on of the storm “to prepare and coordinate the Commonweal­th’s response” to the wintry blast.

Virginia State Police said one person was killed when a military surplus vehicle’s driver lost control in slick road conditions Saturday night on Interstate 81 in Pulaski County, leading the vehicle to be struck by two tractor-trailers.

Earlier, up to 20 inches of snow fell in parts of Missouri. A woman and her 14year-old stepdaught­er died after their car slid into a semitraile­r in Clinton, the Missouri State Highway Patrol said.

Another woman died when her car slid in northern Missouri and was hit by an oncoming SUV. In Kansas, a 62-yearold man died after his pickup skidded into a concrete barrier, the patrol said. And another crash involved two semitraile­rs, killing a 41-year-old driver from Mexico.

St. Louis was blasted, forcing temporary closure of sections of Interstate­s 44, 64 and 70 around the city. Almost 50,000 customers remained without power Sunday in Missouri as the heavy snow snapped branches and downed power lines.

Roys said the region can look forward to a warm-up by midweek. But another storm was possible at week’s end, and he said it’s possible it could bring heavy snow.

“There are a lot of variables,” Roys said. “We will have a better idea of what is coming where in a few days.”

 ?? ERIC BARADAT/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A jogger runs by the Lincoln Memorial as snow accumulate­s in Washington, D.C., on Sunday.
ERIC BARADAT/AFP/GETTY IMAGES A jogger runs by the Lincoln Memorial as snow accumulate­s in Washington, D.C., on Sunday.

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