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Irish Mirror
Irish Mirror
World
The Associated Press & Laura Colgan

Thousands without power and schools closed as winter storm hits southern US

Ice, sleet and snow lingered across much of the southern US as thousands in Texas endured freezing temperatures with no power.

A warming trend is forecast to bring relief from the deadly storm.

More than 390,000 customers in Texas were without power early on Thurdsay as trees, heavy with ice, buckled onto power lines, according to PowerOutage, a website tracking utility reports.

READ MORE: Heroic mum saves life of five-year-old boy attacked by mountain lion in rural California

More than 150,000 of those outages were in Austin, where the city's utility warned residents who had been without electricity that lights and heat may not come back on until later on.

Pablo Vegas, who heads the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, vowed the state's electrical grid and natural gas supply would be reliable and there wouldn't be a repeat of the February 2021 blackouts when the grid was on the brink of total failure.

School systems in the Dallas and Austin, as well as many in Arkansas and Memphis, Tennessee, planned to be closed as bands of winter precipitation continued to push through.

A winter storm is sweeping across portions of Texas, causing massive power outages and disruptions of highways and roads (Getty Images)

Nearly 700 flights scheduled for Thursday are cancelled, according to the flight tracking service FlightAware.com. That followed thousands of cancelations and delays since frigid weather set in Monday.

Watches and warnings about wintry conditions were issued for an area stretching along the West Texas border with Mexico through Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisiana and into western Tennessee and northern Mississippi.

The treacherous driving conditions resulted in at least eight deaths on slick roads since Monday, including seven in Texas and one in Arkansas. Republican Texas Governor Greg Abbott urged people not to drive.

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