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Hind Al Soulia - Riyadh - WASHINGTON —A powerful winter storm has swept across the US, leaving multiple people dead and cutting power to hundreds of thousands of homes.
Winter storm warnings were posted for most of the eastern third of the United States covering 118 million people, as the deep freeze strained energy supplies in some areas, and the National Weather Service predicted widespread, prolonged travel disruptions.
The dangerous onslaught of snow, ice and winds hit air travel especially hard, with major carriers forced to cancel more than 11,000 US flights scheduled for Sunday, according to theindustry tracking service FlightAware.com.
The Arctic blast was accompanied by gusty conditions that sent wind-chill conditions — a measure of how cold it feels based on the rate of heat loss from the body — plunging as low as minus 50 degrees Fahrenheit in the northern Plains.
Some of the heaviest snowfall, up to one foot or more since the storm developed on Friday, was measured on Sunday in parts of Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Missouri, New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania.
New York Governor Kathy Hochul said she had mobilized National Guard troops in New York City, Long Island and the Hudson Valley to assist with the state's emergency storm response.
Ronald Reagan National Airport, located in northern Virginia just across the Potomac River from Washington, was effectively closed altogether.
Airports serving other major metropolitan areas, including New York, Philadelphia and Charlotte, North Carolina, had at least 80% of their Sunday flights canceled, FlightAware data showed.
A private aircraft carrying eight people crashed during takeoff at Bangor International Airport in the US state of Maine on Sunday night, prompting an emergency response and an investigation by federal authorities.
The Bombardier Challenger 600 went down around 7:45 pm local time while departing the airport, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said.
There was no immediate information on injuries or fatalities among those on board, according to news agency AP.
Schools and roads across the country have been closed and flights have been cancelled as "life threatening" conditions stretched from Texas to New England, according to the National Weather Service (NWS).
At least two people died of hypothermia in Louisiana, with state health officials linking their deaths to the storm, and another death was reported in Texas.
Widespread heavy snow, sleet and freezing rain, which is a dangerous phenomenon where cooled rain droplets freeze instantly on surfaces, could last for days and could affect around 180 million Americans - more than half the population.
"The snow and the ice will be very, very slow to melt and won't be going away anytime soon, and that's going to hinder any recovery efforts," Allison Santorelli, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service, told the BBC's US media partner CBS News.
Louisiana's Department of Health confirmed on Sunday that two men had died of hypothermia.
The mayor of Austin, Texas, said there had been an "exposure-related" death.
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani wrote in a post on X that at least five people in the city had died on Saturday but added their cause of death was yet to be determined.
He said, however, "It is a reminder that every year New Yorkers succumb to the cold".
New York state Governor Kathy Hochul warned residents to stay inside and off roads.
"This is certainly the coldest weather we've seen, the coldest winter storm we've seen in years," she said on Sunday.
"A sort of an arctic siege has taken over our state and many other states across the nation."
Hochul said the "brutal" conditions were expected to bring the longest cold stretch and highest snow falls in years.
Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear said on Sunday that the state was seeing more ice and less snow than was originally predicted.
"That is not good news for Kentucky," he said.
Weather experts have warned that one of the biggest dangers of the storm is ice, which has the potential to damage trees, down power lines and make roads unsafe.
More than 200 car crashes were reported in the state of Virginia as the storm moved into the state, according to local media.
Nearly half the states have declared emergencies, and schools across the country are already canceling classes in anticipation of the storm continuing into Monday. The US Senate has also scrapped a scheduled vote for Monday evening.
In declaring an emergency in the nation's capital, Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser said: "We're experiencing the biggest snowstorm in a decade in DC this weekend."
While places in the north such as the Dakotas and Minnesota are used to below- freezing temperatures in winter, it is unusual to see such extreme cold in states like Texas, Louisiana and Tennessee, where temperatures are around 15-20C below the seasonal average.
Those states could also see ice accretions of around an inch caused by freezing rain.
The polar vortex - a ring of strong westerly winds that form above the Arctic every winter containing a pool of very cold air - led to the powerful storm, according to weather experts. — Agencies
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