BUFFALO, Mo. – Shoppers were reduced to picking up supplies by flashlight Tuesday in the few places open in this town of 2,800, as the death toll from a winter storm grew to 51 in nine states.
Three shelters in Buffalo – about 35 miles north of Springfield in hard-hit Missouri – housed nearly a tenth of its population Monday night, and officials said power might not be restored until next week.
The town lost all its power by Saturday. Water towers ran dry Sunday, and water service was restored only late Monday, after the National Guard hooked a generator up to a pumping station.
“There are no services,” Buffalo Mayor Jerry Hardesty said. “I’ve talked to residents who have lived here 50 years, and nobody can remember it ever being this bad.”
About 450,000 homes and businesses in several states were still without electricity Tuesday after a storm that brought ice, snow, flooding and high winds to a swath of the country from Texas to Maine.
The storm had largely blown out of New England by Tuesday, but forecasters expected more freezing rain to hit parts of Texas, perhaps even Houston, tonight, said Dennis Cook of the National Weather Service. Gusty winds were forecast to make the Northeast bone-chilling cold through tonight before warming Thursday.
At the First Baptist Church in McAlester, Okla., where most of the city’s 18,000 residents have lacked power for four days, 47 residents huddled under blankets and in front of space heaters.
“If it wasn’t for the shelter, I don’t know where we’d be,” said Tara Guzman, 38, playing board games with her four children. “We’re tough; we lasted when the power went out until (Monday). We brought mattresses out in the living room and cuddled.”
Subfreezing temperatures were expected to continue in the state, with little sunshine to aid in melting the ice until Thursday or Friday, said National Weather Service meteorologist Kevin Brown.
Some of the 92,000 Oklahoma homes and businesses without power might not have it restored until next week, utility company spokesman said.
“There are a lot of places where virtually everything is destroyed,” Public Service Company of Oklahoma spokesman Stan Whiteford said. “In some cases, entire electric services will have to be rebuilt.”
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