Hundreds of thousands without power in the U.S. after a powerful winter storm

Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons

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By Fritz von Burkersroda

Winter Storm’s Bitter Aftermath: Hundreds of Thousands Face Prolonged Blackouts

Fritz von Burkersroda

Hundreds of thousands without power in the U.S. after a powerful winter storm

Peak Chaos: Over a Million Customers Hit by Outages (Image Credits: Unsplash)

A massive winter storm barreled across the United States from New Mexico to the Northeast over the weekend, leaving a trail of ice-encased power lines and darkened homes in its wake.[1][2]

Peak Chaos: Over a Million Customers Hit by Outages

Ice-laden trees snapped under their own weight, toppling power lines and plunging more than one million customers into darkness at the storm’s height.[1] By Monday afternoon, the number lingered above 700,000, with the South bearing the brunt of the damage.

Tennessee reported the heaviest losses, with estimates exceeding 300,000 outages, followed closely by Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Kentucky.[2] Utility crews in Nashville faced relentless setbacks, as fallen branches repeatedly downed newly repaired lines. Middle Tennessee Electric noted on social media that restoration efforts proved futile against ongoing tree falls.[1]

Residents hunkered down without heat as sub-zero temperatures loomed. Mississippi emergency officials rushed generators, fuel, and blankets to stricken counties, but full recovery stretched into days.

Lives Lost Amid the Freeze

The storm claimed at least 25 lives, with reports climbing higher as hypothermia, crashes, and carbon monoxide incidents surfaced nationwide.[1] In Louisiana’s Caddo Parish, two men succumbed to hypothermia, while New York City mourned several found outdoors in the cold.

A tragic private jet crash in Bangor, Maine, during heavy snow killed six passengers and a crew member.[1] Shoveling snow proved fatal for elderly residents in Pennsylvania, and a tree fall took a life in Mississippi. Homeless individuals like Shannon White in Oklahoma City sought shelter amid the onslaught, wrapping in blankets against biting winds.

  • Tennessee: Power outages topped 300,000, schools closed indefinitely.
  • Louisiana: Two hypothermia deaths confirmed.
  • New York: Heavy snow blanketed Central Park with 11.4 inches.
  • Mississippi: University of Oxford canceled classes through the weekend.
  • Maine: Deadly plane crash amid blizzard conditions.

Travel Grounded, Roads Treacherous

Airlines scrapped over 12,000 flights on Sunday alone – the most since the pandemic – with another 5,000 canceled Monday.[1] LaGuardia Airport in New York shut down entirely, stranding passengers nationwide.

Icy highways sparked hundreds of crashes: Virginia tallied 440 by Monday, North Carolina over 400, and Massachusetts reported 149 wrecks plus disabled vehicles.[2] Governors imposed travel bans, urging citizens to avoid roads until ice thawed – a process forecast to span days.

Governors Sound Alarm on Lingering Dangers

Officials mobilized National Guard units from 12 states and issued emergency declarations across two dozen others.[2] Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear warned of 36 hours of nonstop wintry mix, directing residents without power to warming centers as lows plunged further.

“Unfortunately, the risk of power outages and slick roads is not over,” North Carolina Governor Josh Stein cautioned. “Temperatures will remain dangerously cold throughout the week, especially at night, so please stay safe.”[1] Massachusetts Governor Maura Healey echoed the call: “We’re New Englanders. We’re tough. But we have to take this storm seriously.”

Key Takeaways:

  • Power restoration faces repeated delays from falling ice-weighted trees.
  • Frigid air mass persists, threatening record lows through the week.
  • Utility workers and emergency aid prioritize vulnerable populations.

As cleanup crews battle nature’s remnants, the storm underscored vulnerabilities in a grid strained by extreme weather. Families weighed generator use against carbon monoxide risks, schools extended closures, and communities leaned on neighbors for warmth. The deep freeze tested resilience, but experts predict gradual thawing ahead. What steps are you taking to stay safe this winter? Tell us in the comments.

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