Nearly 1M without power as massive winter storm rages
Nearly a million American homes are without power as a massive winter storm sweeps the country.
According to poweroutage.com, the most impacted areas are in the south central U.S. to the southeast.
“The worst outages are now in Tennessee and Mississippi as ice continues to build up, bringing down trees and power lines,” the outage tracking site reports.
Nearly 290,000 were without power in Tennessee and 140,500 in Mississippi as of mid-morning Sunday.
In Texas, nearly 134,000 were without power; in Louisiana, 121,000; in Kentucky, 56,000; in Georgia, 125,000.
“A significant winter storm is underway, bringing widespread heavy snow, sleet, and freezing rain from the Southern Rockies to New England through Monday,” the National Weather Service reports. “Extremely cold air will follow, prolonging dangerous travel and infrastructure impacts into next week. Severe thunderstorms may produce damaging gusts and tornadoes across the eastern Gulf Coast states Sunday morning and afternoon.”
New England states are expected to get up to 18 inches of snow into Monday.
“Furthermore, heavy rain will develop over the Lower Mississippi Valley on Sunday and parts of the Tennessee Valley on Monday,” NWS says. “In the wake of the storm, communities from the Southern Plains to the Northeast will contend with bitterly cold temperatures and dangerously cold wind chills. This will cause prolonged hazardous travel and infrastructure impacts.”
Latest News Stories
Will County Board Backs Effort to Rename ‘Stigmatizing’ Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal
Access Will County Dial-a-Ride on Track for Full County-Wide Service in 2026
Arizona congressman calls for end to government shutdown
WATCH: Pritzker continues encouraging ICE protests after Guard blocked
Illinois quick hits: Ag incentives announced; Cook County announces increased budget
Senator urges Rubio to move forward designating Antifa a foreign terror organization
Divided Will County Board Authorizes Condemnation for 143rd Street Widening
Former board member expressed concerns about indicted DeKalb superintendent
Trump administration begins axing positions of furloughed federal workers
Fiscal Fallout: Illinois has among highest-paid state employees
Report: State reliance on federal funds up significantly since 1990s
Southwest low on list of safest states; Northeast at the top
Washington state attorney general agrees to protect seal of confession