Deadly blizzard, deemed worst in 45 years, paralyzes greater Buffalo,
N.Y
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[December 26, 2022]
By Gabriella Borter
(Reuters) - Road and utility crews faced the task on Monday of digging
out and restoring some normalcy around Buffalo, New York, where a
blizzard considered the area's worst in 45 years buried snow plows,
stranded motorists in cars and killed at least 13 people.
The lethal blizzard took form late on Friday and pummeled western New
York through the Christmas holiday weekend, capping an Arctic freeze and
winter storm front that had extended over most of the United States for
days, as far south as the Mexican border.
At least 30 people have died in U.S. weather-related incidents since
late last week, according to an NBC News tally, while CNN put the total
number of fatalities at 26.
The greater Buffalo region, lying at the edge of Lake Erie near the
Canadian border was one of the hardest-hit places.
Numbing cold combined with howling winds and heavy "lake-effect" snow -
the result of moisture picked up by frigid air moving over warmer lake
waters - produced a storm that Governor Kathy Hochul said would go down
in history as "the Blizzard of '22."
The storm's official death toll in Buffalo and elsewhere in Erie County
climbed to 13 on Sunday, and was expected to rise as more bodies found
in snow drifts or buried vehicles were examined and confirmed as
weather-related fatalities, authorities said.
The governor called it an "epic, once-in-a-lifetime" weather disaster
that ranked as the fiercest winter storm to hit Buffalo, New York
state's second-largest city, since a crippling 1977 blizzard that killed
nearly 30 people.
The latest blizzard, which initially overwhelmed emergency crews, came
nearly six weeks after a record-setting but shorter-lived lake-effect
storm struck western New York.
RESCUING THE RESCUERS
Despite a ban on road travel imposed since Friday, hundreds of Erie
County motorists were stranded in their vehicles over the weekend, with
National Guard troops mobilized to help with rescues hindered by
blinding white-out conditions.
Authorities were expected to decide Monday morning whether to extend the
ban.
County Chief Executive Mark Poloncarz told reporters that snow drifts as
high as 8 feet on roadways were too thick and heavy to clear with
conventional snow-removal equipment.
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Many snow plows, tow trucks, ambulances and other emergency vehicles
dispatched on Saturday and Sunday became stuck in the snow, "and we
had to send rescue missions to rescue the rescuers," he said.
The Buffalo police department posted an online plea to the public
for assistance, asking those who "have a snow mobile and are willing
to help" to call a hotline for instructions.
Although power had been restored to most Erie County utility
customers, as of Sunday evening about 15,000 homes remained without
electricity, according to Poloncarz.
He said one electrical substation knocked offline was sealed off by
an 18-foot-tall mound of snow, and utility crews found the entire
facility frozen inside.
At the request of state officials, Hochul said, local power
companies had pre-positioned some 7,000 utility workers ahead of the
storm on Friday, but blinding, drifting snow had made it difficult
for crews to reach stricken equipment.
Efforts to clear snow-clogged roads were likewise stymied.
"It is not a matter of resources - bodies and equipment - it is a
matter of mobility and access," Hochul said.
Hochul told reporters on Sunday that the Biden administration had
agreed to support her request for a federal disaster declaration and
she expected formal approval shortly.
While the official blizzard warning for the greater Buffalo region
was lifted on Sunday, officials warned that blizzard-like conditions
persisted in some areas, and that more snow was in the forecast
through Tuesday.
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter; Additional reporting by Ahmed
Aboulenein, Lucia Mutikani, Idrees Ali, Ismail Shakil, Rick Cowan
and ; Writing by Steve Gorman; editing by Ross Colvin, Diane Craft,
Nick Zieminski, Leslie Adler and Gerry Doyle)
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