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OHIO WEATHER

Another winter storm could dump 5 more inches of snow on Dallas-Fort Worth


This story will be updated regularly.

The sun came out Monday, but it didn’t do much to warm the millions of Texans who were struggling without power.

By about 4 p.m. Monday the high had risen to only 13 degrees — not nearly enough to clear the 4 inches of snow that fell Sunday at DFW International Airport.

And before people have had a good chance to steady themselves, more snow could be on its way to add to the slick conditions that have made even short trips from home treacherous, according to the National Weather Service.

Low temperatures Tuesday are expected to drop into the single digits again, and gusty winds will make it feel more like minus 15 degrees, according to Jason Dunn, a Weather Service meteorologist.

Dallas-Fort Worth was under a wind-chill warning through noon Tuesday — the first warning of its kind in North Texas.

“The cold wind chills could cause frostbite on exposed skin in as little as 30 minutes,” the Weather Service said. “Avoid outside activities if possible.”

The next round of wintry weather is expected to move into Texas by Tuesday afternoon, crossing the Red River before driving south toward Dallas, Dunn said.

Areas north of Interstate 20 could get 3 to 5 more inches of snow.

“This should be mainly a freezing rain and/or sleet mix, which could result in additional significant icing especially south of the metroplex,” Dunn said.

After a winter storm warning expired Monday morning, the National Weather Service issued another one for all of Dallas-Fort Worth. The warning, scheduled for 6 p.m. Tuesday to 6 a.m. Thursday, urged North Texans to avoid travel late Tuesday into Wednesday and warned more power outages were likely.

‘A really historic event’

Gov. Greg Abbott deployed the National Guard across the state Monday to perform welfare checks and help take those in need to warming centers.

To clear roads and help essential workers, Abbott also deployed resources including 3,300 state troopers and 3,300 patrol vehicles, as well as workers with the Texas Military Department, Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, Texas A&M Forest Service, Texas Department of Transportation and the Texas Emergency Medical Task Force.

President Joe Biden issued an emergency declaration for Texas on Sunday night, which adds federal aid to state and local response efforts.

Temperatures plunged into the single digits as far south as San Antonio, and officials in Harris County warned that the freeze could create problems on the scale of the hurricanes that slam the Gulf Coast every summer.

“We’re living through a really historic event,” said Jason Furtado, a professor of meteorology at the University of Oklahoma.

The winter storm was part of a massive system that brought snow, sleet and freezing rain to the southern Plains and was spreading across the Ohio Valley and to the Northeast.

Cities across the Midwest set record low temperatures. In Minnesota, the Hibbing/Chisholm weather station, about 175 miles north of Minneapolis, reached minus 38 degrees, while Sioux Falls, S.D., dropped to minus 26. Temperatures also broke records across Nebraska.

In Kentucky, Gov. Andy Beshear warned residents to stay off the road as up to 9 inches of snow was forecast for parts of the state. “It is slick and it is dangerous,” he said.

Disruptions

Most flights out of DFW International Airport and Dallas Love Field were stopped for a second day Monday. In Houston, runways at Bush Intercontinental Airport were scheduled to remain closed until Tuesday.

Fort Worth-based American Airlines canceled about 371 flights at DFW Airport, which is its primary hub responsible for funneling most of its traffic through the central United States. The cancellations nearly matched the 386 flights the airline halted Sunday.

At Dallas Love Field, Dallas-based Southwest Airlines canceled all flights until 1 p.m. to give time for runways and nearby roads to clear, spokeswoman Brandy King said. The airline was running a “thinned” schedule for the rest of the day.

Delta and Alaska Airlines both canceled Monday-morning flights out Love Field, airport spokesman Chris Perry said.

It wasn’t much better nationwide, where airlines had canceled about 3,200 flights on Monday, according to Flightaware.com.

Dallas-area water utilities were already receiving dozens of calls about frozen pipes early Monday, and the number rose as temperatures stayed below freezing. Residents were encouraged to keep faucets running to lower the risk of freezing.

In Grand Prairie, crews were having trouble fixing two water main breaks because of the extreme cold. However, neither break was causing major problems.

The power outages and dangerous road conditions forced many businesses to close Monday.

NorthPark Center and Golden Triangle Mall in Denton were closed all day, and the Galleria in Dallas shut down at noon. Many grocery stores, such as Kroger and Central Market, also planned to close early.

H-E-B, the state’s largest chain of grocery stores, closed…



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