Snowy roads lead to hundreds of Virginia and North Carolina crashes as
Arctic air brings record cold
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[February 21, 2025]
By BEN FINLEY, MAKIYA SEMINERA and SARAH BRUMFIELD
NORFOLK, Va. (AP) — Roads in Virginia and North Carolina remained
treacherous Thursday as unusually heavy snow led to hundreds of
accidents, including crashes on an interstate that involved more than 50
vehicles. Meanwhile, a polar vortex sent temperatures plunging from the
Northern Great Plains all the way to Louisiana.
Two separate collisions stopped traffic on Interstate 40 in Orange
County, North Carolina, on Wednesday afternoon and the stopped vehicles
were struck from behind, including a tractor trailer that hit a
passenger vehicle, causing a fatality, according to the North Carolina
State Highway Patrol. A total of 53 vehicles were involved in 12 crashes
in the area, the highway patrol said. The driver of the tractor trailer
was charged with misdemeanor death by motor vehicle and exceeding a safe
speed for conditions.
The highway patrol responded to nearly 1,200 collisions statewide on
Wednesday, according to Sgt. Christopher Knox. Crashes on Wednesday also
closed portions of Interstate 95 and I-85 near Raleigh, North Carolina.
Virginia State Police reported early Thursday that there had been well
over 800 crashes statewide since heavy snow pounded parts of the
mid-Atlantic on Wednesday. At least 45 crashes involved injuries but no
fatalities.
Emergency workers in Suffolk, Virginia, rescued two people from an SUV
that crashed into water on Wednesday afternoon, according to the city’s
Department of Fire & Rescue. Photos the department posted on social
media showed rescuers stretching a ladder to the vehicle’s roof and
helping one person clinging to the roof rails crawl across the ladder to
land.
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Wednesday’s snowfall in Norfolk, Virginia, ranked as the eighth-highest,
one-day snowfall total the coastal city has ever recorded, Weather
Prediction Center meteorologist Scott Kleebauer said. Norfolk officially
recorded about 10.2 inches (about 26 centimeters) of snow, he said.
High snowfall isn’t unprecedented, he said, but it’s “certainly rare.”
“This is probably one of those one-in-10-years type storm,” Kleebauer
said.
Children in the city of 230,000 on the Chesapeake Bay used boogie boards
to sled down a small hill, while some adults cleared off cars with leaf
blowers. Many roadways were still covered in slush, if not snow, while
authorities urged everyone to stay off the roads to give plows time to
come through.
Mary Stokes, whose family owns a small environmental consulting firm,
said employees weren't able to go out into the field to conduct mold
testing and other types of work to help homeowners and businesses stay
compliant with environmental laws.
“We’re obviously not going to make them take a vacation day when they
physically can’t come to work,” Stokes said while clearing off her SUV.
“But we’re not making any money. It can definitely be a financial hit.”
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Snow accumulates on a truck in Norfolk, Va on Thursday, Feb. 20,
2025. (Billy Schuerman /The Virginian-Pilot via AP)
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Jared Brooks, a surgeon at a local hospital, predicted that schools
wouldn’t reopen in Norfolk until at least Monday. The temperature
wasn’t expected to rise above freezing on Thursday.
“People aren’t used to driving in these kinds of conditions,” Brooks
said while shoveling the sidewalk outside of his house. “And they
just don’t slow down appropriately. And they get kind of crazy.
People just need to stay home and not even try to drive unless they
have to.”
Schools were closed or relying on remote learning throughout large
parts of Virginia and North Carolina, while several thousand
electric customers were without power Thursday morning. About 1,800
flights were canceled or delayed on Thursday across the U.S.,
including about 250 flights in and out of Charlotte Douglas
International Airport in North Carolina, according to the
flight-tracking site FlightAware.com.
Meanwhile, an arctic air mass was bringing widespread,
record-breaking cold to the central United States, and forecasters
expected some locations in the Plains and Lower Mississippi Valley
to experience their coldest temperatures on record this late in the
season, according to the Weather Prediction Center. In Detroit,
crews are fixing a large water main break that left dozens of people
without power and heat amid temperatures well below freezing.
Frigid temperatures broke daily cold records Thursday across 45
weather stations ranging from North Dakota to Louisiana, Kleebauer
said. Parts of Texas also broke daily cold records set in 2021 when
a deadly winter storm caused the state’s power grid to mostly
collapse.
In Nebraska, Grand Island set a new record for Feb. 20 of minus 24
Fahrenheit (minus 31 Celsius), breaking the old record of minus 11 F
(minus 24 C) set in 1938, while Hastings set a new record of minus
20 F (minus 29 C), eclipsing the record of minus 12 F (minus 24 C)
in 1918. In Missouri, new record lows were set in several cities,
including Springfield at minus 12 F, breaking the record of 7 F
(minus 14 C) in 1918, and Joplin at minus 9 F (minus 23 C), breaking
the record low of 16 F in 1963, 1978 and 2021.
The National Weather Service in Dodge City, Kansas, was forecasting
one more day of dangerous cold for western Kansas, with wind child
dropping below minus 20 F in some locations Thursday morning.
Wichita schools have been closed due to the cold since Tuesday,
while many other Kansas schools opened late on Thursday.
But a “big change” is on the horizon, Kleebauer said. Thursday is
expected to be the “last truly cold day” across the country as
temperatures rise next week, he said.
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