Snow, sleet coat East Coast

Storm leads to crashes, canceled flights, power failures

Icy weather caused a tree to topple onto a house in Atlanta early Saturday, trapping a child inside. The boy had to be rescued through a window. Residents in parts of Georgia had expected a couple of inches of snow but instead woke up Saturday to find coats of ice.
Icy weather caused a tree to topple onto a house in Atlanta early Saturday, trapping a child inside. The boy had to be rescued through a window. Residents in parts of Georgia had expected a couple of inches of snow but instead woke up Saturday to find coats of ice.

DURHAM, N.C. -- Snow and sleet pounded a large swath of the U.S. East Coast on Saturday, coating roads with ice and causing hundreds of crashes. Thousands of people lost power and forecasters warned of blizzardlike conditions from Virginia to parts of the Northeast.

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AP/Connecticut State Police

Police, firefighters and emergency responders work at the scene of an accident involving about 20 vehicles Saturday on snow-slicked Interstate 91 in Middletown, Conn. No serious injuries were reported. Snow and sleet coated a large swath of the East Coast, with blizzardlike conditions forecast from Virginia to parts of the Northeast.

Police investigated several fatal crashes as potentially storm-related, but some of the South's biggest cities -- Atlanta, Charlotte and Raleigh -- appeared to avoid the worst of the storm. Authorities praised residents for learning the lessons of past storms that resulted in icy gridlock, where thousands of people were stranded along the interstates. But officials warned that bitter cold would keep roads treacherous well after the snow and sleet stopped.

"If I tell you anything it would be stay home," North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper said. "Do not go out and drive on the roads unless you absolutely have to."

A National Weather Service map showed that the snowfall seemed to follow the Interstate 85 corridor through the state, with locations along and north of the highway receiving snow, and areas to the south getting rain and sleet.

Burlington and Roxboro in central North Carolina received 8 inches or more of snow. Preliminary figures from the National Weather Service in Greer, S.C., showed that snowfall totals reached up to 10 inches in at least seven locations, including Greensboro and High Point, Lewisville in Forsyth County, and Lenoir and Rhodhiss in Caldwell County.

Several inches fell in southeast Virginia, where a blizzard warning was issued for the cities along the coast.

North Carolina reported more than 250 crashes. Virginia State Police said they responded to 325 crashes and 322 disabled vehicles across the state between midnight and noon Saturday. Hundreds of crashes were reported in Tennessee starting Friday. Hundreds of flights were canceled, from Atlanta to airports farther north.

At least one fatality -- a man whose pickup truck went off a snow-slickened Kentucky road Thursday -- has been blamed on the weather. Motorist deaths in North Carolina and Maryland as the storm blew in were being investigated to see if they were caused by the weather.

Power failures grew to about 25,000 in North Carolina, according to a news release from the governor. Nearly half were in the Charlotte area and adjacent Union County, according to Duke Energy.

Across the southeast, airlines including Delta Air Lines Inc. and American Airlines Group Inc. canceled hundreds of flights early Saturday as a result of the storm.

As ice and snow piled up, more than 385 flights were canceled at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport and more than 164 at Charlotte Douglas International Airport, according to flight-tracking website FlightAware.com.

American has already canceled more than 850 flights due to the storm, the airline said, as well as 50 flights scheduled for today. Delta has canceled about 175 flights, primarily arriving at or departing Atlanta, after a layer of ice an inch thick piled up at the airport, the company said on its website Saturday morning.

"Ice is worse than snow, since it's more difficult to de-ice the aircraft," Delta spokesman Michael Thomas said. "I expect operations to tick up to a normal pace later in the day."

In Cornelius, north of Charlotte, Matt Thomas said he used a ruler to measure nearly 6 inches of snow and sleet that had piled up on the back of his pickup truck. He said he planned to spend the weekend enjoying the snow and watching television. A plow passed through his neighborhood, but the road still looked slippery, he said.

"The sleet started first, so there's definitely a layer of ice under the snow," he said. "I'm staying home."

The storm left some areas with much different outcomes than neighboring counties. Unofficial totals from the National Weather Service showed that much of Raleigh and Charlotte had 2 inches or less of precipitation -- much of it sleet -- while areas to the north of both cities got several inches of snow.

In Atlanta and parts of Georgia, people who were expecting a couple of inches of snow instead woke up to a thin coat of ice. The National Weather Service said a wind chill advisory for northern Georgia was to go into effect later Saturday into today. Residents were told to brace for bitterly cold air and strong wind.

Along the Outer Banks in North Carolina, snow wasn't a problem, but high winds forced officials to cancel ferry service. Wind gusts of up to 60 mph were reported.

"There are quite a few disappointed residents here who were hoping to see a few inches of snow on the sand, maybe take a ride on their bodyboards down Jockey's Ridge," said Sam Walker III, news director for Max Radio and the Outer Banks Voice. "Instead, it's just been another typical, windy, wet and cold nor'easter on the Outer Banks."

Some took to social media to complain that they didn't have anything to sled in, prompting an apologetic tweet from one well-known Raleigh weatherman.

"To all my detractors, more than 24 hours ago I began talking about how this snow event could go up in smoke. I try to be honest-all I can do," WRAL-TV chief meteorologist Greg Fishel said early Saturday.

A blizzard warning for southeast Virginia accompanied forecasts of high winds and up to 9 inches of snow there. The National Weather Service had already measured nearly 6 inches of snow at its post in Wakefield on Saturday.

Even with snow coating Virginia Beach roads, diners and staff made it to the popular breakfast spot Citrus.

"When there's bad weather, people come out," manager Tara Junke said. "I've worked in restaurants for 20 years in Hampton Roads and we've never shut down for snow."

Chris Turner, 58, a health care analyst sitting at the counter with a mug of tea, said he drove 7 miles to his usual breakfast spot, aided by four-wheel drive.

"It's fun to enjoy Mother Nature in all her glory," he said. "I'd rather be out. I can't stay at home."

Information for this article was contributed by Jonathan Drew, Ben Finley and Tom Foreman Jr. of The Associated Press and by Annie Massa of Bloomberg News.

A Section on 01/08/2017

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