Winter-weary East Coast hit with another storm as temperatures plunge
elsewhere
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[February 20, 2025]
By BEN FINLEY and JOHN RABY
NORFOLK, Va. (AP) — Officials urged people to stay off the roads
Wednesday in portions of Virginia and North Carolina where a storm
dropped heavy snow and caused hundreds of accidents in places
unaccustomed to significant accumulations.
The storm that already dropped snow in the Midwest spread across the
Tennessee and Ohio Valleys and into places that are just starting to
clean up after a weekend of deadly floods.
Up to 10 inches (25 centimeters) of snow was possible through Thursday
along the Atlantic Coast in Virginia and major ice accumulations were
forecast in eastern North Carolina.
The National Weather Service said snowfall rates of up to 2 inches (5
centimeters) per hour were seen in the Hampton Roads area of Virginia
and in northeastern North Carolina.
Meteorologist Alec Butner said additional accumulations were likely
Thursday morning. While Butner said the snowfall in Norfolk won't
approach the 1892 record of 18.6 inches (47.2 centimeters), it’s still
“fairly infrequent” to reach snowfall totals of about 8 to 9 inches (20
to 23 centimeters).
Virginia State Police reported 275 accidents by late Wednesday
afternoon, including at least two dozen involving injuries. Accidents
also closed portions of Interstate 95 and I-85 near Raleigh, North
Carolina.
Nearly 5,600 flights were canceled or delayed across the U.S., including
more than 400 in and out of Charlotte Douglas International Airport in
North Carolina, according to the flight-tracking site FlightAware.com.
Elsewhere, a polar vortex sent temperatures plunging from Montana to
southern Texas.
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‘Too much for us’
As thick snowflakes pelted Norfolk, Virginia, a line of shoppers snaked
deep into a Harris Teeter grocery store, past loaves of bread on
shelves. In the parking lot of a Total Wine store, college students in
fraternity sweatshirts lugged a keg of beer to their car.
But on the sidewalks of the city’s historic Ghent neighborhood, there
was an eerie quiet. A white-haired shih tzu named Sasha tramped
delicately in newly fallen snow Wednesday.
“This is a little weird for her. I love the snow, but it looks like this
is a bit too much for us,” said Sasha's owner, Lotfi Hamdi, who stocked
up on milk and bread. “If it’s more than five inches, I think that’s a
bit risky for us. Luckily I’m off for the next couple of days.”
Sasha isn’t alone in feeling out of sorts. The winter months in this
city of 230,000 people on the Chesapeake Bay sometimes pass with barely
a dusting of snow. Schools and many businesses closed Wednesday
throughout the Hampton Roads region and could remain shuttered into the
weekend. The Norfolk Naval Shipyard reduced operations.
Deja storm all over again
Virginia remained under a state of emergency that Gov. Glenn Youngkin
issued for another storm last week that allowed the National Guard and
state agencies to assist local governments. North Carolina Gov. Josh
Stein followed with an emergency declaration Tuesday. Both urged
motorists to stay off the roads.
As snow, sleet and freezing rain arrived, Stein warned that "our
greatest concerns remain power outages and road safety.”
Potential ice accumulations of up to one-half inch (1.3 centimeters) in
places like Greenville and Goldsboro would cause tree branches to snap,
said North Carolina Emergency Management Director Will Ray.
Officials said more than 1,200 crew members were ready or already
clearing roads.
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Polly Mae Pollock, 5, sleds down a hill at Byrd Park, Wednesday,
Feb. 19, 2025, in Richmond, Va. (Margo Wagner/Richmond
Times-Dispatch via AP)
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Snow after floods
Weekend storms that pummeled the eastern U.S. killed at least 19
people, including 14 in Kentucky, where a half-foot (15 centimeters)
or more of snow was expected Wednesday.
“This is a snowstorm in the middle of a natural disaster,” Kentucky
Gov. Andy Beshear said.
In southern West Virginia, weekend floods killed three people in
McDowell County, destroying roads and disrupting public water
systems. Shelters remained open at churches and schools.
The incoming snowstorm “is going to severely hinder, if not halt, a
lot of the efforts that we have,” said McDowell County Commissioner
Michael Brooks.
Bone-chilling cold
About 100 million people in the nation’s midsection were gripped by
a cold wave. Hundreds of public school districts canceled classes or
switched to online learning for a second day Wednesday in Oklahoma,
Nebraska, Kansas and Missouri.
Ashley Pippin, a spokeswoman for Special Olympics Kansas, is getting
tired of the cold even as the group organizes a series of
fundraising polar plunges, including three this weekend. It's so
cold, firefighters might have to go out and break the ice.
“We’ve done it before,” Pippin said.
Hettinger, North Dakota, recorded a low temperature of minus 45
degrees (minus 42 Celsius) on Wednesday and had warmed to minus 13
(minus 25 Celsius) by midday. Denver broke a 19-year-old record when
it dipped to minus 6 (minus 21 Celsius). In San Antonio, Texas, wind
chill readings could dip as low as minus 2 (minus 19 Celsius) early
Thursday. .
Earlier this month, famous groundhog Punxsatawney Phil predicted six
more weeks of winter weather.
“I was thinking I’d like to choke him,” said Robin White Stevens of
hard-hit Grundy, Virginia, whose challenges this winter have
included falling on her hip while walking along icy ditch lines. “We
can’t catch a break weatherwise. Snow, flood. It’s a mess around
here.”
But Michele Hunter, who drives a bus for a southeast Virginia
transit authority and hails from Buffalo, New York, had a different
take on winter. While she stocked up on groceries because stores
were closing down, she said she's more accustomed to blizzards that
bring feet of snow — not inches.
In Buffalo, life still mostly goes on, she said, unlike the
standstill she's witnessing in coastal Virginia.
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“This is light,” she said of the snow falling around her. “In
Buffalo, we have to dig tunnels in order to get to the end of the
street, to get on a snowmobile, to go get groceries. This is
nothing.”
___
Raby reported from Charleston, West Virginia. Associated Press
writers Heather Hollingsworth in Mission, Kansas, and Gary Robertson
and Makiya Seminera in Raleigh, North Carolina, contributed to this
report.
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