Record-breaking cold clobbers two-thirds
of the U.S.
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[January 29, 2019]
By Rich McKay
(Reuters) - Two-thirds of the continental
United States will be a frozen ice box Tuesday, as the so-called polar
vortex of frigid arctic air spins across the U.S. Midwest, clips the
Great Lakes, the Ohio Valley and pushes on into New England.
And the sub-zero cold and bitter winds will stick around for a couple of
days, possibly bringing dozens of record lows with a life-threatening
freeze before dissipating by the weekend, the National Weather Service
reported (NWS).
The polar vortex is a mass of freezing air that normally spins around
the North Pole, but has slipped southward and swirled into the United
States, forecasters said.
The hardest-hit area will be the Midwest, where wind chill could bring
temperatures as low as -50 F (-46C) in the Chicago area by Tuesday
evening, the NWS reported. One-to-two feet of snow was forecast in
Wisconsin, and six inches in Illinois.
Even Alabama and Mississippi could see snow, the service added.
"This arctic air dumps out of Canada and will affect us for days," said
Richard Bann, a forecaster with the NWS's Weather Prediction Center in
College Park Maryland.
"We'll even get some snow this afternoon in the (Washington) D.C. area,"
he said. "And because it's so cold, there won't be much of a warm-up
Wednesday. You'll have to wait for the weekend, before you see any
higher temperatures."
Blizzard conditions were predicted across parts of the western Ohio
Valley and snow was expected through Wednesday from the Great Lakes
region into New England.
States of emergency have been declared from Wisconsin and Michigan, down
to Alabama and Mississippi.
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A snow plough clears a road in Denver, U.S., January 22, 2019 in
this video grab obtained from social media video by Reuters January
28, 2019. Denver International Airport/via REUTERS
In Illinois, Governor J.B. Pritzker said wind chill could drive
temperatures to -55 degrees Fahrenheit in northern parts of the
state on Tuesday evening, a level that can cause frostbite in a
matter of minutes.
"This is a potentially historic winter storm that will bring extreme
cold to our state and all Illinoisans must prepare," Pritzker said
in a written statement released by his office.
Parts of north and central Georgia are expecting about 2 inches of
snow or more in the coming days, along with freezing rain and
ice-slicked highways. Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp shut down government
offices in 35 counties Tuesday, and schools across swaths of the
state are also closed.
Air traffic in the region is affected, with more than 1,200 flights
canceled and as many delayed, the flight tracking site
FlightAware.com reported early Tuesday.
Atlanta-based Delta Air Lines Inc said it would waive flight change
fees for passengers affected by the winter weather in Chicago,
Detroit and areas of the Upper Midwest.
(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta, Maria Caspani and Gina Cherelus
in New York and Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles; Editing by Andrew
Heavens)
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