Severe cold sends Midwest for cover
Published 10:43 pm Tuesday, January 13, 2009
MINNEAPOLIS — Temperatures crashed to Arctic levels Tuesday as a severe cold wave rolled across the upper Midwest on the heels of yet another snowstorm, closing schools and making most people think twice before going outside.
Thermometers read single digits early in the day as far south as Kansas and Missouri, where some areas warmed only into the teens by midday.
The ice and snow that glazed pavement was blamed for numerous traffic accidents from Minnesota to Indiana, where police said a truck overturned and spilled 43,000 pounds of cheese, closing a busy highway ramp during the night in the Gary area.
AAA responded to 1,450 motorists across Michigan on Tuesday morning, mostly to assist with dead batteries, spinouts and minor accidents after an early snowfall, said spokeswoman Nancy Cain.
About 8 a.m. in Minnesota, temperatures were minus 40 in International Falls and minus 35 in Roseau. Farther south, Minneapolis hit 18 below zero with a wind chill of 32 below and black ice was blamed for numerous accidents.
Some Minnesotans took it as just another winter day, even in the state’s extreme northwest corner where thermometers bottomed out at 38 degrees below zero at the town of Hallock and the National Weather Service said the wind chill was a shocking 58 below.
“It’s really not so bad,” Robert Cameron, 75, said as he and several friends gathered for morning coffee at the Cenex service station in Hallock. “We’ve got clothing that goes with the weather. … We’re ready and rolling, no matter what.”
“It’s so beautiful. There’s not a cloud in the sky,” said Keith Anderson, 66. But he said that’s not stopping him from skipping town at the end of the week to spend a couple of months in Nevada and Arizona.
Outside, one of the station’s gas pumps froze up at least once, and assistant manager Terrie Franks had to go out to apply deicer spray.
“You definitely have to have gloves on because touching the cold metal — your hands are frozen,” Franks said.
The weather service warned that exposed flesh can freeze in 10 minutes when the wind chill is 40 degrees below zero or colder.
In neighboring North Dakota, Grand Forks dropped to a record low of 37 below zero Tuesday morning, lopping six degrees off the old record set in 1979, the weather service said.
Schools were closed because of the cold as far south as Iowa, and authorities in Grand Rapids, Mich., issued an extreme cold weather alert and went out urging the homeless to seek shelter.
