24 Dead, 1 Million Without Power: The Brutal Aftermath of America’s 2,000-Mile Monster Storm
A Rising Death Toll and Tragic Loss
The storm’s lethality has spiked as it moved East. Of the 24 confirmed fatalities, many were victims of exposure or freak accidents:
- Texas: A 16-year-old girl died in a sledding tragedy; another victim was found in the cold in Austin.
- New York: 5 individuals were found dead outside in freezing temperatures in NYC over the weekend.
- Louisiana: The Health Department confirmed 2 deaths from hypothermia in Caddo Parish.
- Arkansas & Tennessee: Multiple deaths linked to road accidents and storm-related injuries.
“Exploding Trees” and the Ice Crisis
In a rare phenomenon, residents in Mississippi and Tennessee reported “exploding trees.” Rapid freezing caused sap to expand and split trunks with loud cracks, further damaging a power grid already burdened by 1 inch of ice accretion.
- Tennessee: Accounts for nearly a third of all current outages (approx. 300,000).
- The South: Louisiana, Mississippi, and Georgia each report over 100,000 outages.
Historical Benchmarks Shattered
This storm rewrote the record books across the Midwest and South:
- Snowfall Records: Little Rock, AR (6″) and Oklahoma City (4.4″) broke daily records that had stood since the 1890s and 1940s.
- Cold Records: Baltimore’s BWI recorded its largest snowfall since 2016, followed by a “Deep Freeze” expected to last all week.
Looking Ahead: The One-Week Danger Zone
The National Weather Service (NWS) warns that the Arctic air mass isn’t moving. For regions like the Northern Plains and Upper Midwest, wind chills will remain below -50°F. In the South, where infrastructure is not winterized, the lack of a “thaw” means ice will remain on power lines, keeping them heavy and prone to snapping throughout the week.