Record-breaking cold possible across much of U.S.
updated 12:05 PM EST, Sun January 5, 2014
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- NEW: iReporter in Indiana says most people are staying home, churches are closed
- More than 2,200 flights have been canceled for Sunday, many at Chicago's O'Hare airport
- NFL fans, players in Green Bay will face wind chills of minus 15
- At least 13 deaths have been linked to the weather
The National Weather
Service warned Sunday that much of the United States will see this week
the coldest temperatures in almost 20 years as an arctic cold front
descends on 140 million people.
"A piece of a polar vortex, the coldest air in the Northern Hemisphere ... is coming," CNN Meteorologist Alexandra Steele said.
And in addition to the cold, there will be heavy snow in the eastern Plains and Great Lakes, as much as a foot Sunday.
Temperatures will be 30 to 50 degrees below average Sunday from the Plains to the Upper Mississippi Valley, forecasters said.
By Wednesday, nearly half
the nation will shudder in temperatures of zero or lower, forecasters
said. Even the Deep South will endure single-digit or sub-zero
temperatures.
Sunday's weather will
have a huge impact on travel, with more than 2,200 flights originating
in or heading to the U.S. canceled, according to flight-tracking website
flightaware.com.
John F. Kennedy
International Airport in New York closed after an incident involving a
regional jet, Delta Flight 4100 from Toronto.
Port Authority spokesman
Ron Marsico said the plane, carrying 32 passengers, skidded into a snow
bank while turning onto a taxiway after landing safely. No injuries are
reported. The aircraft was towed to the gate, the Federal Aviation
Administration said.
Flight operations were suspended for about two hours.
Traveling to or through Chicago was causing many headaches.
There were arrival
delays at O'Hare airport of more than one hour on average, and at least
1,100 cancellations of departing or arriving flights. At Midway airport
there were 140 cancellations.
Here's what to expect across the country this week:
Midwestern snow and one freakishly cold game
Snow was falling across
the Midwest. In Brownsburg, Indiana, more than 4 inches had fallen
during the morning hours, said Bill Byrd.
"Most people are staying in their homes, and church services are canceled," he told CNN.
In Wisconsin, more than
70,000 hardcore Green Bay Packers fans hoping to see their team get
closer to the Super Bowl will have their loyalty tested Sunday as they
endure temperatures between 4 and 8 degrees in Wisconsin. With the wind,
the air could feel as cold as minus 15 degrees to the sold-out crowd.
The Packers will give
free hand warmers, hot chocolate and coffee at the game, which is
scheduled to begin at 4:40 p.m ET, spokesman Aaron Popkey said.
Packers running back Eddie Lacy said he didn't think there was much he could do to prepare for a game this cold.
"It's definitely going to be a different experience," he said Saturday, according to the team website. "It's mind over matter."
And it'll get worse, overnight temperatures are expected to fall to minus 15 degrees.
In Embarrass, Minnesota,
residents wondered whether they might see their record-cold temperature
of 64 below zero, set in 1996, snap like an icicle.
"I've got a thermometer from the weather service that goes to 100 below," resident Roland Fowler told CNN affiliate KQDS. "If it gets that cold, I don't want to be here."
The Deep South
The arctic blast
threatens to sweep subzero lows as far south as Alabama and plunge much
of the Deep South into the single digits.
To put things in
perspective, the weather in Atlanta and Nashville, Tennessee on Monday
will be colder than in Anchorage, Alaska, Steele said.
Freezing rain is also
possible along the Appalachians all the way up to New England over the
next couple of days, the National Weather Service said.
Deadly conditions
The low temperatures and wind chill are a dangerous recipe for rapid frostbite or hypothermia.
"Exposed flesh can
freeze in as little as five minutes with wind chills colder than 50
below," the National Weather Service's Twin Cities office in Minnesota
said.
Over the past week, at least 13 people have died from weather-related conditions.
Eleven people died in road accidents -- including one man crushed as he was moving street salt with a forklift.
One man in Wisconsin
died of hypothermia. And an elderly woman with Alzheimer's disease in
New York state wandered away from her home and was found dead in the
snow in a wooded area about 100 yards away.
Indiana Gov. Mike Pence encouraged residents to do more than check on friends and relatives.
"In preparation for the
inclement weather, I encourage Hoosiers to assemble an emergency
preparedness kit with plenty of nonperishable food and water, fill any
necessary prescriptions, ensure they have a safe heating source, avoid
unnecessary travel and be careful if they must be outside." he said.
Travel nightmares
The already dreadful stream of stranded passengers and canceled flights will only get worse.
FlightAware.com, which
tracks cancellations due to weather, mechanical and other problems, said
more than 2,200 flights have been canceled for Sunday. That's after
4,500 flights were called off on Friday and Saturday.
In Chicago, a plane
headed to Las Vegas slid off the taxiway at O'Hare International Airport
on Saturday night. None of the passengers on Spirit Flight 245 were
injured, an airlines spokeswoman said.
Other cities like
Cincinnati; Lexington, Kentucky; Louisville, Kentucky; and Memphis will
see temperatures crash Sunday, and precipitation could lead to
dangerous, icy driving conditions.
Roads will worsen Sunday night in Atlanta; Birmingham, Alabama; and Knoxville, Tennessee, forecasters said.
This, too, shall pass
If there's any good news
about the biting cold snap, it's that much of it should be over for the
Midwest by Wednesday, the National Weather Service said.
In the meantime, those
in the western third of the country can skip all the fuss. Most of the
West can expect relatively pleasant weather through Monday.
CNN's Todd Borek, AnneClaire Stapleton, Julia Lull, Jareen Imam and Erica Fink contributed to this report.
end quote from:
... before a polar vortex threatened
The snow in the last few days was bad, but much of the U.S. is about to see the coldest temperatures in almost 20 years.
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