A massive snow storm has left tens of thousands of people without power. Strong winds and heavy snow targeted the Pacific Northwest first.
“It’s been a little tough,” said one resident. “We have no gas. We’re all electric at our house, so heating the house has been the biggest issue.”
Conditions are just as bad in Washington, where a massive pileup shut down the westbound lanes of I-90 on Saturday for hours, leaving drivers stranded in their cars.
Love and happiness on this Valentine’s Day, swept aside by the same storm creeping into the Southeast overnight.
Snow came down for more than 12 hours straight in Oklahoma City, blanketing the roads, making visibility difficult.
Kate Collins was heading north, driving an 80,000-pound big rig.
“I know that my biggest concern, I think on the road, is inexperienced drivers going very, very slowly on the freeway,” Collins said. “Twenty-five, 30 miles an hour and then swerving a lot because they don’t know where the lines are. It was probably the worst thing I have ever encountered.”
But many are heeding the warning and staying home, making the most of this winter wonderland.
For the first time in Texas, all 254 counties are under a winter storm warning. The temperature in Dallas is already colder than in Anchorage, Alaska.
Up to 400 record cold temperatures are possible across the country through the middle of the week.
“Right now, we have two major weather systems coming together across the country, a very strong storm track right here and some of the coldest air on earth, the polar vortex forcing that cold air into a very moist and stormy environment,” said CBS News meteorologist and climate specialist Jeff Berardelli. “That means major snow and incredibly dangerous ice across the deep south.”
An unlikely and potentially messy mash-up on a day usually reserved for perfect pairings.