A brutal winter storm that brought Christmas chaos to millions of Americans would be slow to dissipate, the US National Weather Service said yesterday, after intense snow and frigid cold caused power outages, travel delays and at least 32 deaths across the eastern part of the country.
“Much of the eastern United States will remain in a deep freeze through Monday before a moderating trend sets in on Tuesday,” the agency said in its latest advisory.
In Buffalo, New York, a blizzard left the city marooned, with emergency services unable to reach the worst-hit areas.
Photo: EPA-EFE
“It is [like] going to a war zone, and the vehicles along the sides of the roads are shocking,” said New York Governor Kathy Hochul, a Buffalo native, where 2.4m snow drifts and power outages made for life-threatening conditions.
Hochul told reporters on Sunday evening that residents were still in the throes of a “very dangerous life-threatening situation” and warned anyone in the area to remain indoors.
More than 200,000 people across several eastern US states woke up without power on Christmas morning and many more had their holiday travel plans upended, although the five-day-long storm featuring blizzard conditions and ferocious winds showed signs of easing.
Photo: AP
The extreme weather sent wind chill temperatures in all 48 contiguous US states below freezing over the weekend, stranded holiday travelers with thousands of flights canceled and trapped residents in ice and snow-encrusted homes.
Thirty-two weather-related deaths have been confirmed across nine states, including at least 13 in Erie County where Buffalo is located, with officials saying the number is sure to rise.
Officials described historically dangerous conditions in the snow-prone Buffalo region, with hours-long whiteouts and bodies discovered in vehicles and under snow banks as emergency workers struggled to search for those in need of rescue.
Photo: AP
The city’s international airport remains closed until today and a driving ban remained in effect for all of Erie County.
“We now have what’ll be talked about not just today, but for generations [as] the blizzard of ‘22,” Hochul said, adding that the brutality had surpassed the region’s prior landmark snowstorm of 1977 in the “intensity, the longevity, the ferocity of the winds.”
Due to frozen electric substations, some residents were not expected to regain power until today, with one substation reportedly buried under 5.5m of snow, a senior county official said.
The weather service earlier warned that blizzard conditions in western New York’s Great Lakes region had continued into Sunday, with “additional snow accumulations of 2 to 3 feet [0.6m to 0.9m] through [Sunday night].”
The storm forced the cancelation of nearly 3,000 US flights on Sunday, in addition to about 3,500 scrapped on Saturday and nearly 6,000 on Friday, according to tracking Web site Flightaware.com.
More than 1,000 US flights had already been canceled just hours into yesterday, the Web site reported. Travelers remained stranded or delayed at airports throughout Christmas Day including at major hubs in Atlanta, Chicago, Denver, Detroit and New York.
Road ice and white-out conditions also led to the temporary closure of some of the nation’s busiest transport routes, including the cross-country Interstate 70.
Drivers were being warned not to take to the roads — even as the nation reached what is usually its busiest time of year for travel.
The extreme weather has severely taxed electricity grids, with multiple power providers urging millions of people to reduce usage to minimize rolling blackouts in places like North Carolina and Tennessee.
The fierce winter conditions are also taking a toll in Canada.
A weekend bus rollover in British Columbia that was believed to be caused by icy roads left four people dead and sent 53 to hospital, including two still in critical condition early on Sunday.
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