USA TODAY International Edition

Millions digging out from killer storm, bracing for more

- John Bacon

Millions of Americans from Colorado to Washington, D.C., were digging out from a major winter storm Monday while forecaster­s warned that more snow chaos could be on the way next weekend.

The storm began its march in Colorado last week before dumping up to 20 inches of snow in parts of Missouri. On its way east, it rolled through an area from Baltimore to North Carolina, blanketing Washington and its environs with up to a foot of snow and pounding parts of western North Carolina with a half-inch of ice.

Almost 100,000 homes and businesses remained without power Monday in Missouri, Kansas, North Carolina and Virginia.

Schools were closed for hundreds of thousands of kids across the metro Washington area Monday, hours after the snow finally quit. Interstate­s were cleared, but local roads remained icy, some untouched by plows.

North Carolina had the highest number of power outages lingering Monday, almost 50,000. Gov. Roy Cooper declared a state of emergency and urged residents in the mountainou­s west to stay off roads.

“Thanks to the crews working hard to restore power and keep our roads safe,” he said.

Flight delays and cancellati­ons across the swath of the storm eased Monday after a weekend of scheduling havoc. A jet slid off a taxiway in Cincinnati on Sunday, but no injuries were reported.

Interstate­s that had been the scene of thousands of crashes and abandoned vehicles were opening.

At least nine people died in the storm, including four in Missouri, where the Highway Patrol rescued almost 2,000 stranded motorists over the weekend.

Almost a foot of snow was measured at St. Louis Lambert Internatio­nal Airport. Omaha was digging out from almost

State Patrol Director Leo Schmitz

as much, as was the Illinois capital city of Springfield.

Illinois State Trooper Christophe­r Lambert was among the storm's fatalities, hit by a car Saturday while responding to a three-vehicle crash I-294.

“Trooper Lambert deliberate­ly placed his vehicle in a position to protect the lives of the victims of the previous crash and took on the danger himself,” State Patrol Director Leo Schmitz said.

The weather event was largely over Monday. The next few days should provide an opportunit­y for recovery, according to AccuWeathe­r forecasts. But a “significant” winter storm could develop from Friday into next weekend, sweeping snow and ice from the central Plains to a large portion of the Northeast.

There may be more after that, AccuWeathe­r Lead Long-Range Meteorolog­ist Paul Pastelok said.

“There will be no rest for the weary with another storm approachin­g the East between Jan. 22 and 23,” Pastelok said.

 ??  ?? Schools were closed Monday in the Washington, D.C., area after a snowstorm Sunday and Monday. BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Schools were closed Monday in the Washington, D.C., area after a snowstorm Sunday and Monday. BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

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