Many schools in Atlanta, northeastern Georgia and western North
Carolina remained closed Friday after a mid-week storm dumped
snow across the region, whipped up winds that snapped power
lines and led to at least a dozen deaths.
Sub-freezing temperatures overnight left many roads with ice
that is difficult for drivers to detect, but that's expected to
melt soon, said Laura Belanger, a meteorologist with the
National Weather Service in Atlanta.
"We're looking at a warm-up for the southeast and mid-Atlantic
with daytime temperatures up in the 40s and 50s (Fahrenheit) and
hitting the low 60s in some areas by Saturday," Belanger said.
Areas as far north as Boston will inch up to the low 40s
(Fahrenheit) but dip below freezing at night, she said adding,
"This is still winter."
Through the early morning hours, NWS freeze warnings remained in
effect over much of the Deep South as far as Tampa, Florida.
The winter storm sent blasts of cold air as far south as
Mississippi, Lousiana, Texas and Oklahoma.
In Houston, 22-year-old Cynthia Chavez said she walked on ice
for the first time in her life on Wednesday, and fell on her
second step.
"I was, like, coming out of our house and there was a little
step and what I thought was water," Chavez said by phone from
Olde Towne Kolaches in Houston where she is a cashier. "Two
steps and I was on my butt. At first, I was nervous but then I
was like, ah, THIS is ice."
More than 9 inches (23 cm) of snow have fallen this week in
Durham, North Carolina, since Monday, with 7 inches (18 cm) or
more in various places across southern Virginia, the NWS said.
In Virginia on Thursday, a six-year-old boy on a sled slid onto
a road and was struck and killed by a car, CBS affiliate WDBJ-TV
in Roanoke, Virginia, reported.
On Thursday in North Carolina's Washington County, a 26-year-old
man was killed when his vehicle went off a snowy road and
overturned in a canal, officials said.
In Oklahoma, two people died on Wednesday in a fire apparently
caused by the use of electrical space heaters, media reported.
(Reporting by Rich McKay; additional reporting by Brendan
O'Brien in Milwaukee and Bernie Woodall in Fort Lauderdale,
Fla.; Editing by Larry King)
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