
WASHINGTON: Unrelenting storms have pummelled the US over the past week, leading to at least 50 weather-related deaths, officials and US media reported on Friday, as large swathes of the country brace for new winter wallops.
Frigid temperatures, snow gales, and thick ice have caused fatal accidents on treacherous roadways, snarled air travel, closed schools, and cut power to thousands, with millions of Americans under fresh weather warnings.
In Tennessee, 14 weather-related fatalities were confirmed by the southeastern state’s health department, while five women who were returning home after making a pilgrimage to Mecca died on a Pennsylvania highway on Tuesday in an accident with a tractor-trailer, according to police.
Five weather-related deaths occurred in Kentucky, governor Andy Beshear said in a statement on Friday, while in Oregon, three people were electrocuted when a live power line fell on their parked car during an ice storm on Wednesday, the Portland fire department said.
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Deaths were also reported in Illinois, Kansas, New Hampshire, New York, Wisconsin, and Washington state, where five people are believed to have succumbed to exposure, local media reported, citing Seattle officials.
Blizzard conditions hammered several parts of the country including the Pacific Northwest, the Rocky Mountains and parts of New England – notably western New York, where meteorologists said about 1.9m of snow fell near Buffalo in a five-day span this week.
Frigid temperatures have also extended deep into the US South, a region not used to contending with such winter weather.
Parts of the country are bracing for more brutal conditions this weekend.
“Another Arctic blast will bring cold temperatures and dangerous wind chills to the Plains and the Mississippi Valley to the eastern US,” the National Weather Service said on Friday in its latest alert.
Air travel suffered significant setbacks on Friday too, with more than 1,100 US flights cancelled and another 8,000 delayed, according to the website Flightaware.com.
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