http://news.excite.com/news/ap/001229/13/news-holiday-storm
Nasty Weather Hits Southern Plains

A truck creeps along the ice-covered westbound lane of
   Interstate 30 in downtown Little Rock, Ark., on Tuesday,
Dec. 26, 2000. Photo by Danny Johnston (AP) 

Updated 10:23 PM ET December 26, 2000

   By JAMES JEFFERSON, Associated Press Writer 

   LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) - Snow and ice glazed roads and coated tree limbs
   across the southern Plains on Tuesday, knocking out power to more than 300,000
   homes and businesses and grounding hundreds of flights. 

   Arkansas National Guardsmen were sent out in Humvees to rescue motorists
   stranded on slippery highways during the second huge ice storm to hit the state in
   two weeks. 

   "The southwest corner is just bloodied," said Jennifer Gordon, a spokeswoman for the state Emergency Management Department. "Roads are like skating rinks. It's just catastrophic." 

   Arkansas state employees were told to stay home Wednesday. Roads in the Texas Panhandle were closed late Tuesday by more than a foot of snow, and state troopers were checking for people stranded in their cars. 

   Four traffic deaths were blamed on the storm in New Mexico, and Oklahoma had three deaths. Authorities said a three-car accident in east Texas that killed five happened on a slick road. 

   Several communities opened shelters across southern Arkansas after more than 100,000 homes and businesses lost electricity because of ice-heavy limbs falling on power lines. 

   "Going to sleep last night you could hear trees popping all over the woods," said Billy Ray McKelvey, managing editor of the De Queen Daily Citizen newspaper, which was unable to publish a Tuesday issue. 

   Across Arkansas, stuck and abandoned vehicles hampered efforts to clear roads. 

   Texas authorities closed some highways. "We can't salt the roads fast enough," said Garza County, Texas, deputy constable Cliff Laws. 

   All three runways were closed at the Little Rock, where flights had been halted beginning late Monday because of half an inch of ice. 

   People waited in lines at Will Rogers World Airport in Oklahoma City, where most flights were canceled. 

   "We came for the holidays and now we're never leaving," said Gregg Tiven, 22, who waited with his girlfriend for a flight home to New York City. 

   American Airlines canceled more than 700 flights at Dallas-Fort Worth because of weather problems elsewhere. 

   About 122,500 customers were without power Tuesday in Oklahoma. More than 60,000 customers had no electricity in northeastern Texas, and some 34,000 customers were in the dark in northeastern Louisiana. 

   In Oklahoma's rural Grady County, Ronald Goeller, 66, fired up a propane stove for heat after his power went out.

   "I've got two or three neighbors who are older than me and the only heat they've got is electric heat," he said. 

   In eastern Oklahoma, Steven McWilliams and his family of seven headed for an emergency shelter after the power went out in rural Sallisaw. 

   "We got iced in and couldn't get out on the roads last night," McWilliams said Tuesday. "Today, when we lost electricity and the phone, we decided to get out because of the children." 

   The storm dumped up to 14 inches of snow on parts of New Mexico, and travelers along Interstate 40 east of Albuquerque filled motel rooms that normally would have sat empty Christmas night. 

   "I don't blame them because the freeway is nasty," Les Huffman, a desk clerk at the Days Inn motel in Moriarty. 

 
UNL
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
High Plains Regional Climate Center

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