Storms unleash tornadoes in U.S. east,
record snow in Midwest
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[April 16, 2018]
By Rich McKay
ATLANTA (Reuters) - Deadly slow-moving
storms generated record or near-record snowfall and low temperatures in
the U.S. Midwest and tornadoes further east on Sunday, leaving airline
travelers stranded and thousands without power.
In Michigan, where snowfall was expected to reach 18 inches in some
areas, about 310,000 homes and businesses were without power because of
an ice storm, most of them in the southeast of the state.
Large areas of Detroit were without power and customers were not
expected to have it back on Sunday night, utility DTE Energy <DTE.N>
said. It was working to have 90 percent of outages restored by Tuesday,
DTE spokeswoman Carly Getz said in a statement.
The weight of ice on power lines, coupled with high winds, caused more
than 1,000 power lines to fall in Detroit and Wayne County, DTE said.
The worst of the snow was focused on the upper Great Lakes, with Green
Bay, Wisconsin, seeing its second largest snowstorm ever after 23.2
inches fell as of Sunday afternoon, the National Weather Service said.
For the twin cities of Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota, the April
monthly record for snowfall of 21.8 inches (55 cm) was surpassed on
Saturday, the National Weather Service said.
Two tornadoes tore up trees and ripped apart homes in Greensboro and
Reidsville, North Carolina, killing a motorist who was hit by a tree,
according to Greensboro's city manager, local media reported.
The storms stretched from the Gulf Coast to the Midwest and were moving
into the Northeast and New England.
Record low temperatures for the date were expected in Oklahoma City on
Monday at 30 degrees F (-1 C), and in Kansas City, Missouri, at 25 F (-4
C), Hurley said.
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Dark clouds hover above buildings amidst tornadoes in Fort
Lauderdale, Florida, the U.S., April 10, 2018 in this still image
obtained from a social media video. Emmet Finneran/via REUTERS
On Friday, the weather system produced 17 reports of tornadoes in
Arkansas, Louisiana, Missouri and Texas, with four people injured
and 160 buildings damaged in a possible tornado in northwest
Arkansas, local media reported.
The weather was blamed for two traffic deaths in western Nebraska
and Wisconsin, according to National Public Radio.
The storms also killed a one-year-old girl when a tree fell on a
recreational vehicle where she was sleeping, the sheriff's office in
Bossier Parish, Louisiana, said.
By Sunday night, 1,804 flights had been canceled into or out of U.S.
airports, the website flightaware.com reported, including 148
flights in or out of the Minneapolis-St. Paul airport.
(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta; Additional reporting by Bernie
Woodall in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. and Andrew Hay in Taos, N.M.;
Editing by Adrian Croft and Peter Cooney)
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