Virginia governor declares storm emergency as snow and ice bear down on
mid-Atlantic states
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[February 11, 2025]
By JOHN RABY
A wintry mess was bearing down on mid-Atlantic states Tuesday with
forecasts of significant snow and ice accumulations prompting warnings
of potential power outages.
The National Weather Service said travel would become treacherous
Tuesday through early Wednesday in much of Virginia and West Virginia.
Virginia Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin on Monday declared a state of
emergency ahead of the storm, allowing state agencies to assist local
governments. Schools and government offices throughout Virginia were
closed Tuesday.
The heaviest snow, up to 10 inches (25.4 centimeters), was forecast in
portions of northern and central Virginia and eastern West Virginia. Ice
accumulations could range from a glaze in Kentucky and West Virginia to
a half-inch (1.3 centimeters) in the Roanoke Valley of southwest
Virginia, the weather service said. Power outages and tree damage were
likely in places with heavy ice buildups.
“Did you think winter was over? Think again!” the weather service's
office in Blacksburg, Virginia, said in a post on the social media
platform X.
Appalachian Power, which serves 1 million customers in West Virginia,
Virginia and Tennessee, said it has requested 700 additional workers
from neighboring utilities to assist with problems by Tuesday morning.
In northern Virginia, the National Park Service closed a portion of the
George Washington Memorial Parkway, a narrow highway that winds its way
through woods along the Potomac River. The parkway connects multiple
small national park sites and has historically been a trouble spot
during winter storms for abandoned cars that created a slalom course for
snowplows and other vehicles.
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Maryland Department of Transportation employees use a backhoe to
load a truck with salt at the State Highway Administration District
6 Office in LaVale, Md., Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2025. (Steve
Bittner/Cumberland Times-News via AP)
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Winter storm warnings extended from Kentucky to southern New Jersey,
and a flood watch was posted for a wide swath of Kentucky,
Tennessee, southwest Virginia and northern Georgia. The snow-and-ice
mix was expected to become all rain as temperatures climb by
Wednesday afternoon.
A separate storm system is set to bring heavy snow from Kansas and
Missouri to the Great Lakes on Wednesday, the weather service said.
Dangerous cold was forecast Tuesday from an Arctic air mass
stretching from Portland, Oregon, to the Great Lakes.
The temperature was expected to bottom out Tuesday morning at minus
33 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 36 degrees Celsius) in Butte, Montana,
where over the past two winters at least five people died due to
cold exposure, said Brayton Erickson, executive director of the
Butte Rescue Mission. Advocates for the homeless in the city of
about 35,000 planned to be out on the streets distributing sleeping
bags, jackets, mittens and other cold weather gear to anyone who
needs them, Erickson said.
“When it gets this cold, we kind of pull out all the stops,” he
said. “Having all those resources available literally can save their
life or keep them from frostbite.”
___
Associated Press writers from across the U.S. contributed to this
report.
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