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The Financial Express

At least 18 die as cold spell grips Northeast US

| Updated: January 07, 2018 13:53:52


Photo: Reuters Photo: Reuters

Street crews are digging out snow-clogged roads across the US east coast after a powerful “bomb cyclone” winter storm, with temperatures set to plunge further during the brutal cold spell that has already killed 18 people.

From Baltimore to Caribou, Maine, workers battled to clear snow and ice as wind chills were forecast to fall as low as minus 40 degrees Celsius in some areas after sundown, according to the National Weather Service.

In the latest fatality blamed on the frigid weather, a driver slid off an icy road, killing a pedestrian, early on Friday (local time) in North Charleston, South Carolina, reports Reuters.

“Huge patches of ice all over the city. Stay at home.”

The fierce cold will reach from New England to the Midwest and down to the Carolinas, forecasters warned, adding that low-temperature records could be broken across the region in the coming days.

In much of New England on Friday, the highs will reach only into the single digits or teens Fahrenheit, with intense wind chills, said Dan Pydynowski, a meteorologist with private forecasting service AccuWeather.

“It can be very dangerous,” Mr Pydynowski said.

“Any kind of exposed skin can freeze in a couple of minutes.”

Wind chill describes the combined effect of wind and low temperatures on bare skin.

The extreme cold also raised the risk that road salt would not work to melt ice, possibly leaving highway crews to sanding roads to improve traction, Massachusetts transportation officials said.

Utility companies across the East worked to repair downed power lines as about 31,000 customers remained without electricity early on Friday, down from almost 80,000 the day before.

Most of the outages were in West Virginia, Virginia and North Carolina.
The storm that swept in on Thursday with winds gusts of more than 113km per hour, dumped 30 centimetres or more of snow throughout the region, including Boston and parts of New Jersey and Maine, before ending early on Friday.

The weather has been blamed for at least 18 deaths in the past few days, including four in North Carolina traffic accidents and three in Texas.

Extensive train delays, some airports resume flights.
Schools in Boston and Baltimore cancelled classes on Friday while those in New York were open.

Commuter railways serving New York and Boston’s suburbs reported extensive delays as they worked to repair frozen equipment and clear snow-covered tracks.

Thursday’s storm caused a 0.9-metre tidal surge that flooded the area around Boston’s historic Long Wharf with icy seawater.

Firefighters used an inflatable raft to rescue one motorist from a car submerged up to its door handles, Boston Fire Commissioner Joseph Finn told reporters.

Communities outside Boston, including Scituate, also experienced extensive flooding.

New York’s John F Kennedy International and LaGuardia airports resumed flights on Friday after closing during whiteout conditions the day before.

More than 1,200 US flights had been cancelled by midday on Friday; the most cancellations were at the three major airports in the New York area and at Boston Logan International Airport.

Nearly 500 members of the National Guard were activated to assist with the emergency response along the East Coast, including 200 in New York state, authorities said.

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