Southeast Enters Deep Freeze
ATLANTA — Freezing rain and sleet coated parts of the Southeast with a layer of ice Saturday, canceling hundreds of airline flights, knocking out power to thousands of customers and shutting down sections of every interstate highway in the metro Atlanta area.
Three weather-related traffic deaths were reported, two in Georgia and one in South Carolina, police said.
At Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, only one of the four runways was open for much of the day and “very few flights are coming or going,” said airport spokeswoman Felicia Browder.
AirTran alone canceled 90 flights for the day, spokesman Tad Hutcheson said.
“It was the worst possible combination of ice, sleet and freezing rain,” Hutcheson said. “That is the hardest stuff to get off the planes. They were spraying the de-icing fluid on the plane to get it off, and it was refreezing.”
Delta cut its schedule systemwide by about 40% in anticipation of the storm, spokesman Anthony Black said.
In South Carolina, Delta, Northwest Airlines, U.S. Airways and others canceled flights from Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport and from Columbia Metropolitan Airport.
The atrium at the Atlanta airport became a campground for hundreds of stranded travelers after airlines canceled 49 departures and 147 arrivals.
“That is about 10% of what we normally do for flights,” airport spokeswoman Lanii Thomas said.
The Atlanta Hawks basketball team spent the night at the airport aboard their chartered airplane waiting to be de-iced and then for permission to take off, and finally gave up Saturday morning and went to a hotel. The team got a flight out of Atlanta late Saturday afternoon, arriving in Memphis a little more than an hour before their game against the Grizzlies.
The ice also accumulated on power lines and tree limbs. At least 109,000 Georgia Power customers were without power Saturday afternoon, about half of them in the Atlanta area, spokesman Tal Wright said.
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