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Winter storms pound Midwest, head to New England

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Posted 8:12AM on Friday 1st February 2002 ( 23 years ago )
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - The biggest storm of the winter season loped toward New England early Friday after leaving behind a blanket of snow and ice from Texas to New York. <br> <br> Some Kansas City-area residents were forced to stock up on flashlights and cooking gas as they bundled up for a cold night without power, or heat, with temperatures in the teens. <br> <br> The ice and snow storms shuttered schools, flooded roads, brought down power lines, canceled airline flights and made for treacherous driving across the Plains and Great Lakes. <br> <br> At least 15 deaths were blamed on slick roads or freezing temperatures. <br> <br> Missouri Gov. Bob Holden declared a statewide state of emergency, Kansas Gov. Bill Graves declared a state of emergency for 21 counties and Oklahoma Gov. Frank Keating declared 28 counties disaster areas. <br> <br> At its peak, the storm left 270,000 customers without power in Kansas City and 36,000 had no electricity in Illinois. At least 185,000 lost power in parts of Michigan and Indiana. <br> <br> Freezing rain and sleet coated trees Wednesday and Thursday, their ice-laden limbs snapping and cracking as they fell to the ground, pulling power lines with them. Arcing power lines flashed blue and green through Kansas City&#39;s night sky. <br> <br> ``It was poppin&#39; like the Fourth of July back there,&#39;&#39; said Doris McGee of Kansas City, describing a backyard tree limb that pulled down the power line to her house. <br> <br> As the worst of the storms moved east, officials feared ice accumulation would make it difficult to dig out Friday from the smorgasbord of snow, slush and ice. <br> <br> ``That makes this easily the worst storm we have ever experienced,&#39;&#39; said Kansas City Power and Light spokesman Tom Robinson. ``We need our customers to be prepared that this could last several days.&#39;&#39; <br> <br> Flights resumed at Kansas City International Airport, after two airlines canceled service Wednesday. But the airport reported delays of 30 minutes to two hours. <br> <br> A foot of snow snarled O&#39;Hare International Airport in Chicago. Monique Bond, spokeswoman for the Chicago Department of Aviation, said both O&#39;Hare and Midway airport had dozens of cancellations and significant delays. <br> <br> Oklahoma and Missouri were hit the hardest by the storms, with an icy rain lacquering everything in sight. Utility officials warned it could be days before power was fully restored. <br> <br> Some 255,000 customers were left without heat or lights in Oklahoma. Officials with Oklahoma Gas & Electric Co. called the two-day storm the worst in the company&#39;s 100-year history. <br> <br> In the flat ranchland near Anadarko, Okla., cattle roamed free after heavy ice took down fences. In Perry, 100 miles away, decades-old elm and pecan trees littered city streets and county roads. <br> <br> ``It looked like a bomb went off in town,&#39;&#39; Fire Chief Pete Tell said. <br> <br> Hundreds of schools were closed Thursday in Oklahoma, Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Nebraska and New York. Many schools in New Hampshire were closed Friday as a precaution. <br> <br> In Enid, Oklahoma&#39;s ninth-largest city, most of its 45,000 residents were still without power Thursday night. The city only had two days of water left, so it ordered 24 generators for the city&#39;s water well fields. <br> <br> Southwestern Oklahoma State University told its students to go home until Monday and closed for only the fourth time in a century, said school spokesman Brian Adler. <br> <br> The community of Downers Grove, Ill., received the most snow in the nation Thursday with 13.1 inches, followed by Delton, Mich., with 13 inches, according to WeatherBank Inc.

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