Disaster Millions of Americans face below-zero temperatures as storms bring blast of Arctic air, snow and ice

1705314149532.png

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Subfreezing temperatures across much of the U.S. left millions of Americans facing dangerous cold as Arctic storms left four dead and knocked out electricity to tens of thousands in the Northwest, brought snow to the South, and walloped the Northeast with blizzard conditions that forced the postponement of an NFL game.

An estimated 95 million people nationwide faced weather warnings or advisories Sunday for wind chills below zero Fahrenheit (minus 17 Celsius). Forecasters said the severe cold was expected to push as far south as northern Texas while the bitter blast sends wind chill readings as low as minus 70 degrees (minus 56 Celsius) in Montana and the Dakotas.

“It takes a matter of minutes for frostbite to set in,” the South Dakota Department of Public Safety said in a statement Sunday urging people to stay indoors.

In Buffalo, New York, where snowfall of 1 to 2 feet (30 to 60 centimeters) was forecast, severe conditions led officials to postpone the Buffalo Bills-Pittsburgh Steelers NFL playoff game from Sunday to Monday. Winds whipped at 30 mph (48 kph), and snow was falling at a rate of 2 inches (5 centimeters) per hour.

Workers with shovels and trucks worked to clear snow from the field at Buffalo’s Highmark Stadium as the Bills warned volunteers eager to help with the shoveling to stay at home and not defy a travel ban on area roads.

“Looks like a pretty good day to not have a football game,” New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Buffalo native, posted on X with a video clip of whiteout conditions in the western New York city.

At least one Bills player was out in the bad weather Sunday putting his newfound free time to good use. Offensive tackle Ryan Van Demark shared a video on Instagram showing fellow lineman Alec Anderson helping a motorist struggling with icy road conditions.

“Good Samaritan, Alec, helping the people,” Van Demark narrates on the brief clip.

Zack Taylor, a National Weather Service meteorologist in College Park, Maryland, warned some parts of the Northeast would see intense snowfall and extreme winds, with gusts up to 50 mph (89 kph) possible.

“That’s why they’re expecting to see near-blizzard conditions at times,” Taylor said.

Across the country in Oregon, more than 120,000 homes and businesses were without electricity, most of them in the Portland metro area, a day after high winds and a mix of snow and ice brought down trees and power lines.

“Given the extent of the damage and the high level of outage events, restoration efforts will continue into the week and customers are encouraged to plan accordingly,” Portland General Electric said in a statement. The utility said it was watching a second weather pattern that could bring high winds and freezing rain on Tuesday.

The City of Portland Bureau of Environmental Services said its crews were working non-stop at multiple locations to make emergency repairs and prevent sewage releases into homes and businesses. Portland’s largest sewage pump station, which serves downtown and the surrounding inner city, was under partial service due to a frozen pipe.

Widespread power outages affecting tens of thousands were also reported Sunday in Michigan, New York, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. In Nebraska, the Omaha Public Power District asked customers to conserve electricity to prevent outages.

“The weather came on faster and has been more prolonged than anticipated,” the district said in a statement Sunday.

Airports across the country were impacted. More than half of flights into and out of Buffalo Niagara International Airport were canceled. Scores of flights also were canceled or delayed at Chicago, Denver and Seattle-Tacoma airports.

Forecasters also warned that rapid bursts of heavy snow and wind could cause drastic and sudden drops in visibility in eastern Pennsylvania and parts of northern New Jersey and Delaware with some “near whiteout conditions” possible.

Another Arctic storm that’s dumped heavy snowfall in the Rockies was forecast to push further south, potentially bringing 4 inches to 6 inches (10 to 15 centimeters) of snow to parts of Arkansas, northern Mississippi and west Tennessee.

Juan Villegas wore layers of clothing beneath his heavy coat Sunday as he and roughly a dozen subcontractors in downtown Des Moines, Iowa, shoveled away a blanket of snow, which also covered park benches and partially buried fire hydrants the day before the state’s presidential caucuses.

Working in temperatures of minus 15 degrees (minus 26 degrees Celsius), Villegas said the best way to feel warm was to “just keep moving.”

“If you stay doing nothing, it’s when you really feel the cold,” Villegas said.

Much of Wisconsin were under advisories through Monday afternoon, with predicted wind chills as low as 30 degrees below zero (minus 34 Celsius).

Even parts of northern Louisiana, Alabama and Georgia could see snow. In Shreveport, Louisiana, Mary Trammel was among residents who stocked up on bottled water, food and fuel for generators ahead of subfreezing weather expected to coat some roads in ice and up to an inch (2.5 centimeters) of snow.

“It’s cold out here,” said Tramel, who told KSLA-TV she bought bread and ingredients for enough soup to last days.

Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders declared a state of emergency in advance to give utility trucks and trucks hauling essential supplies greater flexibility to respond.

Officials in Mississippi’s capital city of Jackson were preparing for days of freezing weather after cold snaps in 2021 and 2022 caused pipes to burst and water pressure to drop across the city of 150,000.

“We feel as confident as we can that we’re prepared for whatever comes our way,” Ted Henifin, Jackson’s interim manager of the city’s long-troubled water system, told WAPT-TV. He said crews were on standby to respond to any broken pipes.

The wild weather didn’t just bring snow and ice. Record high tides that flooded some homes in Maine and New Hampshire on Saturday also swept three historic fishing shacks into the sea from where they had stood for more than 130 years in South Portland, Maine.

“History is just being washed away,” Michelle Erskine said Sunday, a day after capturing video footage of the last two wooden shacks sliding into the ocean.

In Oregon, just south of Portland, 100 trees toppled Saturday, including one that fell on a house and killed a man. Two other people died of suspected hypothermia and a fourth died in a fire that spread from an open-flame stove after a tree fell onto an RV.

The snow and gusting winds had let up Sunday in Oregon, but frigid temperatures meant roads remained treacherous and much of Portland was shut down. In nearby Lake Oswego, Glenn Prohaska was looking for a business that had WiFi so he could book a hotel. With the power out, the temperature in his home had dropped to the 20s overnight.

“In the 40 years I’ve been here, this is the worst I’ve seen,” he said.

https://apnews.com/article/winter-weather-snow-freezing-29b2628c7ab77d939172bb0b82e12f93 (Archive)
 
And yet, I still see people walking around in shorts. If I owned a pair of shorts, I would join in on the frigid fun.
 
is it just me, or are people more and more each year making big fucking deals about weather patterns that happen all the fucking time?

Like the local news in my neck of the woods was freaking the fuck out because we were supposed to get 1 INCH of snow... not a foot, but an INCH. Snow trucks and store owners covering the streets and sidewalks with fuck-ton of salt that wound up going to waste and probably fucking up the concrete in the process. People fucking panicking at supermarkets raiding the shelves over what amounts to fucking dandruff. Incidentally, it didn't snow and we only got rain, which did flood a bunch of streets in a couple of towns, which just tells me we have a sewer/street issue.
 
WHERE IS MY GLOBAL WARNING BITCHES .

actually wtf i am talking about every weather event is because of global warming accorind to the chicken littles
 
  • Like
Reactions: Termina
What's the big deal? This happens a lot.

I guess if your job keeps you indoors 24/7, that initial burst of -7 as you move from your office to your car can come as a shock.
 
is it just me, or are people more and more each year making big fucking deals about weather patterns that happen all the fucking time?

Like the local news in my neck of the woods was freaking the fuck out because we were supposed to get 1 INCH of snow... not a foot, but an INCH. Snow trucks and store owners covering the streets and sidewalks with fuck-ton of salt that wound up going to waste and probably fucking up the concrete in the process. People fucking panicking at supermarkets raiding the shelves over what amounts to fucking dandruff. Incidentally, it didn't snow and we only got rain, which did flood a bunch of streets in a couple of towns, which just tells me we have a sewer/street issue.
It's Chinks and Pajeets who can't drive in the Snow.
 
is it just me, or are people more and more each year making big fucking deals about weather patterns that happen all the fucking time?

Like the local news in my neck of the woods was freaking the fuck out because we were supposed to get 1 INCH of snow... not a foot, but an INCH. Snow trucks and store owners covering the streets and sidewalks with fuck-ton of salt that wound up going to waste and probably fucking up the concrete in the process. People fucking panicking at supermarkets raiding the shelves over what amounts to fucking dandruff. Incidentally, it didn't snow and we only got rain, which did flood a bunch of streets in a couple of towns, which just tells me we have a sewer/street issue.
klimaat7.jpgklimaat8.jpg
They absolutely are. Now im fairly certain the surface of the sun has been photoshopped in for the memes but given that it's Germany maybe not. What I certainly can vouch for is the Swedish one where in the past it was a pleasant weather report and now you get fear and panic inducing yellow/orange/red/deep red color schemes no matter how normal the summer temperatures are. Constant whining about muh water whenever there's a dry spell exceeding 24 hours etc
 
They would know what to do when it gets this "cold", if they weren't invaders from a tropic country.
 
  • Like
Reactions: JosephStalin
is it just me, or are people more and more each year making big fucking deals about weather patterns that happen all the fucking time?
I started noticing this over a decade ago and looking back on it I think it's connected to rise in smart phone/social media use.

It was really weird to see boomers that had lived in New England their whole life start panicking over 3 inches of snow, but they'd see Jodi from their pickleball club freaking out about it on facebook, so now THEY had to panic too.
 
Lmao, I found a local article that literally says
Portland hasn’t seen such a sustained stretch of cold weather since 2017, when highs reached 28 or 29 degrees for four consecutive days.
As though seven years is a long time ago.

What everyone is saying is correct for Portland/western Oregon as well - this happens just about every winter. Usually one, maybe two, cold spells with either ice or a minor bit of snow (relative to other places in the country), that last from about a day to a week. The problem is, since it's only ever once or twice a year, lasting about a week at the absolute most, no one ever thinks to make any kind of preparation for when it does happen. Everything just turns into a pathetic clusterfuck.


I mean, I've been going just about psychotic being trapped on my property for the past two-three days, but my excuse is that I live in the boondocks on a hill.
 
View attachment 5637452View attachment 5637453
They absolutely are. Now im fairly certain the surface of the sun has been photoshopped in for the memes but given that it's Germany maybe not. What I certainly can vouch for is the Swedish one where in the past it was a pleasant weather report and now you get fear and panic inducing yellow/orange/red/deep red color schemes no matter how normal the summer temperatures are. Constant whining about muh water whenever there's a dry spell exceeding 24 hours etc
They definitely are. Back in the 1990s I recall deep red for temperatures in the 100s in my neck of the woods but now it’s in the 80s. They adjust a lot of that shit just for alarmist purposes. We now have to pretend 85 degrees or a couple of inches of snow are reasons to panic. I think some do start shitting their pants at extreme cold weather because that means their DoorDash order will take longer or *gasp* may not find a willing driver. They didn’t stock up at the grocery store ahead of time and don’t want to drive in treacherous conditions to go to Trader Joe’s to buy some microwave meals.
 
I welcome the more typical winter weather. All December long it just fucking rained every other day, and that shit gets tiresome quick.
 
What's the big deal? This happens a lot.


Treating normal weather events that have happened all my life as unique and dangerous is required to keep the climate change grift going.

The concept of 25 year floods" used to be understood by everyone, and everyone's town has a history that roughly matches up with it "Yeah, remember the big one in 73'? Nah, I was too young, but, I remember the one from 95' " , yet, modern media pitches the idea that extreme weather never happened before. And, anyone younger than 40 will have no personal recollection to gainsay the claim that thunderstorms were never this bad, and winters never this cold, etc etc etc before.

In PA, we get the infrequent tornado , or much more common derecho that'll take out a couple acres of trees and the power lines in your town. Usually on a 10 - 12 year cycle for any given Country.

The last one came through here right on schedule in 2018, about 12 years since the last one, but, the college kids went into a tizzy about "CLIMATE CHANGE!" being the problem because, they were only six when the last one happened and can't remember it.
 
Back