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poniedziałek, 11 listopada 2019

Arctic blast brings snow, ice, and bone-chilling temps across U.S.


An arctic blast is expected to bring snow, ice and bone-chilling temperatures to tens of millions of people across the United States this week.

The surge of Arctic air was forecast to spread from the Midwest to the Gulf and East coasts, according to the National Weather Service.

The agency expects record-setting cold from Monday through Wednesday, with the lowest temperatures predicted for Wednesday across the east.

Below freezing temperatures are forecast as far south as the central Texas coast by Wednesday morning, the National Weather Service said.

“This will make it feel like in the middle of winter rather than in November for much of the eastern two-thirds of the country for the next few days.”

One person was killed in a head-on car crash in Kansas on Monday, the first known fatality of the extreme wintry conditions. The crash occurred on Monday morning in Osage County, when the driver of a pickup truck lost control on an icy highway and crossed the center line, NBC affiliate KSNT reported.

The truck hit an SUV head-on, killing a child and injuring three other people, the station reported.

By Monday afternoon, snow and ice had already ground air traffic to halt in Chicago, where nearly 2,000 incoming and outgoing flights at O’Hare International Airport had been delayed or canceled as of Monday afternoon, according to the tracking site Flight Aware.

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The average incoming delay was just over six hours, while outgoing flights were behind by more than 16 hours, according to the site.

On Monday morning, a plane trying to land at O’Hare International Airport slid off the runway. None of the 38 passengers and three crew members aboard an Envoy Air flight from Greensboro, North Carolina, were hurt, according to The Associated Press.

In New York City, where temperatures were expected to plunge into the single digits on Tuesday afternoon after a bout of rain and snow, emergency management officials pleaded with residents to be cautious on the roads and to watch out for signs hypothermia.

Across Missouri, snow and ice was already causing havoc on the state’s roads. Authorities had responded to dozens of crashes and stranded drivers throughout the day, NBC affiliate KSHB reported.

Among them was a K9 deputy in Clay County, north of Kansas City, who’d stopped to help a driver who slid off the road, the sheriff’s office said.

None of them were injured in the incident, authorities said.

In Dallas, where a bitter wind chill was driving temperatures into the 20s, officials reminded pet owners to take extra care of their dogs and cats.

“Don’t be fooled by your pet’s fur coat,” said Ed Jamison, director of Dallas Animal Services, in a news release.

Even those thick coats can’t withstand a deep freeze, Jamison said, imploring people to make sure their animals remain inside.

In Kentucky, where forecasters were calling for light snow followed by bone-chilling record lows, university students in Lexington broke out their winter weather gear early to get to class, NBC affiliate WLEX reported.

Others were dreading the prospect of a 13-degree day on Wednesday.

“It makes me want to stay in bed and not go to class,” one student told the station. “But that’s not really an option.”

A man plays with his dog in a snowy Humboldt Park in Chicago on Nov. 11, 2019.Scott Olson / Getty Images

Meanwhile, another round of snow was trailing close behind the arctic blast, forecasters said. A chance of snow, sleet and rain was expected across the Pacific Northwest and into the Rockies beginning Tuesday night.

“The precipitation will likely move into the northern Plains in the form of snow early on Wednesday,” the National Weather Service said.





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