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After a deadly snowstorm, millions of Americans face bitter cold days after digging out.

On a bitterly chilly Monday, tens of millions of Americans were digging themselves out of a monster snowstorm that had dumped up to a foot of heavy snow in parts of the east of the United States. The storm caused 18 deaths, and thousands of flights were cancelled. Roads were icy and covered with snow from?New York, Massachusetts and Texas in the northeast down to North Carolina and Texas in the south. At least 25 governors have declared states of emergencies.

Residents in some southern states experienced winter conditions not seen for decades. Inches-thick ice brought down power lines and trees. At least 18 deaths were attributed to the storm in multiple states. Authorities reported that a 16 year old girl from Frisco, Texas died on Sunday in a sledding crash. Another youth in Saline County in Arkansas died while being pulled over ice and snow by an ATV when it hit a tree. Local media reported that three people in Pennsylvania died shoveling snow.

Authorities in Austin, Texas said that a person who was trying to find shelter at an abandoned gas station died from apparent hypothermia. Zohran Mamdani, the mayor of New York City, said that at least five people had died from exposure to cold in the city. He urged residents to call 911 if they see anyone in need on the streets. The National Weather Service said that while the storm system drifted away from the East Coast and into the Atlantic Ocean on Monday, an Arctic air blast was coming in from Canada, prolonging the sub-freezing temperature for several days.

Allison Santorelli is a NWS Weather Prediction Center meteorologist. She said, "This storm has left the East Coast, but there are still some snow squalls." The big story is the extreme cold that will last into early February. Forecasters reported that almost 200 million Americans, from the Canadian border down to the Gulf of Mexico were on some type of extreme cold alert. Lubbock in Texas had a minimum temperature of minus four degrees Fahrenheit on Monday (-20 degrees Celsius), and New York City and Boston were all expected to have temperatures below zero for most of this week.

According to PowerOutage.us' tracking website, nearly 800,000 customers in the Southeast U.S., including homes and businesses, were without power due to the cold, including 246,000 people in Tennessee. More than 12,500 U.S. flight cancellations were made on Sunday, the worst day for air traffic since the COVID-19 Pandemic began in 2020.

As of 9:15 am on Monday, approximately 3,900 flights?towards or from the United States were already canceled. FlightAware, a tracking website, reports that ET (1 415 GMT) is the time. Sean Duffy, the U.S. Transportation secretary, told CNBC that he hoped airports would be "back to their normal state" by Wednesday.

SCHOOLS SHUT DOWN

Many roads and highways became dangerously slippery due to the mix of ice, snow and freezing rain.

Ryan DuVal drove his vintage firetruck through Tulsa's icy streets on Sunday, searching for anyone in need of help.

He said, "I saw the need to get people out of cold." "You can just cruise around the streets and offer someone a ride if you see them. If they accept, that's great. If they don't, I can warm them in the truck and get them some water, food, or something."

Residents of Bonito Lake in New Mexico were shoveling after 31 inches snow. Santorelli reported that Central Park in New York City received 11.4 inches of snow, while Logan Airport at Boston had 18.6 inches.

New York Governor Kathy Hochul announced that she mobilized National Guard troops to New York City, Long Island, and the Hudson Valley in order to help with the state's emergency response.

Mamdani, who announced that the schools would be closed for a remote day of school, quipped, "I know this may disappoint some, so feel free to throw me a snowball if you see me."

Even with the snowstorms and disruptions, many people enjoyed the weather, especially in Washington DC where on Sunday a large crowd gathered for an impromptu snowball battle in Meridian Hill Park.

Children zoomed down a steep slope beneath the dome of the U.S. Congress on sleds that families brought to Capitol Hill. (Reporting Bureaus: Writing by Peter Graff, Joseph Ax and Nick Zieminski; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne, Nick Zieminski and Nick Zieminski).

(source: Reuters)