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Snow Storm Hits Southern United States, January 10, 2011


Arctic blast coats South in treacherous snow, ice

By DORIE TURNER Associated Press

Monday, January 10, 2011

ATLANTA (AP) --

Stranded vehicles littered roadsides Monday as several inches of snow and sleet coated Atlanta and other parts of the South, freezing the morning commute in many areas and canceling thousands of flights at the world's busiest airport.

Sleet, ice and several inches of snow - as much as 9 inches in some places - blanketed states from Louisiana to the Carolinas mostly unaccustomed to arctic weather and caused at least three deaths and left thousands without power. It also hit a part of the country where most major cities have only a handful of snow plows, if any at all.

In Atlanta, under three to four inches of snow and ice, state officials were forced to move Monday's inauguration of newly elected Gov. Nathan Deal from the state Capitol steps inside to the shelter of the House chamber. The inaugural gala was scrapped to keep supporters off treacherous roads.

Emily Blackwell and Whitney Ball, both 22-year-old students at Georgia State University, were stuck at an apartment complex in north Atlanta on Monday. Ball's late 1990s model, white Ford Mustang had rear-wheel drive and couldn't make it up the steep hill to get out of the complex.

"It was slushy" Sunday night, Ball said. "I tried to drive on it, but it was just as bad."

Both had been watching a football game with friends Sunday and had hoped to get home before the snow hit. They said they had been well-stocked with food and supplies at their own homes - but that their friends weren't as prepared.

"I even bought a sled," Ball said. "And now I'm here without it."

Michigan native Phil Cooper, who lives in Marietta, a northern suburb of Atlanta, said he drove 20 miles Monday on highways he said were barely plowed to get to work in Atlanta's Buckead neighborhood.

"Pretty normal for Michigan, but here in Atlanta, you take 16 lanes of highway and it turns into two," Cooper said.

The winter weather began rolling across the South on Sunday, coating bridges and roads with snow, sleet and freezing rain. The governors of Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia and Tennessee declared emergencies and schools and colleges called off classes. Snow and ice had blanketed several cities, including up to 3 inches in parts of Atlanta, which rarely gets so much.

The snowy weather would begin spreading to north to Ohio by Tuesday, forecasters said.

In Alabama, roads were coated with ice in Shelby County, just south of Birmingham, where Waffle House waitress Stephanie McGougin served eggs and grits to the few diners who could make it inside early Monday. There were plenty of empty seats at the restaurant, which is normally busy but was virtually deserted.

"I think we're about the only place open," McGougin said.

Despite officials imploring people to stay off the roads, interstates around Atlanta were clogged with cars early Monday.

Georgia was expecting up to 6 inches in the northern mountains from the powerful storm that also dumped snow and ice in Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Texas. Forecasters said the front could also bring sleet and freezing rain lasting into Tuesday in Georgia.

Highway crews were working to keep major roads passable. Georgia Department of Transportation spokesman Rick Parham said Monday morning that at least one lane was open in each direction on all major highways.

The snow in downtown Atlanta came down heavily for hours. Other areas were experiencing thunder snow and even lightning.

Unlike other times when an inch or two of snow coats the ground, temperatures were not expected above freezing into Tuesday, so it won't melt.

"Since it's going to be pretty cold over the next few days, we could see whatever accumulates sticking around for a few days," National Weather Service meteorologist Daniel Lamb said.

Outside Nashville, Carla Gaster, the facilities manager for 20/20 Research, looked out her kitchen window in Ashland City before dawn Monday and said snow was still falling.

"It's really soft, fluffy and pretty," Gaster said, adding she was glad she didn't have to drive in it.

"I work for a company that allows me to work from home," she said.

Tim Loucks, general manager of the Pilot Truck Stop in the northwestern Louisiana town of Haughton, said he had an empty diner as truckers who slept on his lot during the night were pulling out.

"Interstate 20 is open, but it's moving slow," Loucks said. "There's ice on the bridges and overpasses."

Loucks said the situation was different for drivers trying to drive on local roads. "If you're off the main roads, it's a skating rink," he said.

Icy roads were blamed in separate accidents Sunday that killed two people in northern Louisiana. A third person died in Tulsa County, Okla., when her car went off an icy road and into a pond, officials said.

Alabama Gov. Bob Riley said workers had readied snow and salt trucks to help clear icy roads, and asked all residents to stay home through Monday unless it is imperative to travel.

Cars were having trouble on the slippery streets and highways all over the South, with numerous slideoffs. Off and on, the snow was mixing with sleet around Atlanta, said National Weather Service meteorologist Robert Beasley.

The weather led to more than 2,000 flights being canceled in the region Monday, according to FlightAware, which tracks airline flights.

Nearly 2,000 flights were canceled Monday at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, the world's busiest.

Churches across the South canceled Sunday night services.

The worship leader at one prepared to use a web camera to broadcast an abbreviated worship service over the Internet from his home since members couldn't make it to church.

"I'll just do one or two acoustic songs, something like that, just to keep it going until next week," said Ben Nelson of Helena United Methodist Church in suburban Birmingham. Besides snow, some areas around the city have gotten a tenth of an inch of ice, the weather service said.

Auburn University students must go somewhere other than campus to watch the Tigers play in the national championship bowl game Monday. The university has canceled all viewing parties and other events planned as the state prepares for severe winter weather.

---

Associated Press writers Carol Druga, Greg Schreier and Debbie Newby in Atlanta, Jay Reeves in Birmingham, Ala., Holbrook Mohr in Jackson, Miss., Alan Sayre in New Orleans, and Schuyler Dixon in Dallas contributed to this story.




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