Georgia governor declares state of emergency as winter storm looms
Governor
Nathan Deal was criticized for his response to January 28 snow storm
that paralyzed the Atlanta metro area
10
February, 2014
With
memories of thousands of vehicles gridlocked for hours on icy metro
Atlanta highways fresh in their minds, officials in north Georgia
prepared Monday for another round of winter weather, with the
governor declaring a state of emergency for 14 counties.
Governor
Nathan Deal, who was criticized for his response to the January 28
storm that paralyzed the metro area and left motorists stranded in
vehicles overnight, tweeted Monday morning about the weather-related
emergency declaration and said it would be expanded as necessary. In
a statement Sunday, he said he had put emergency response agencies on
alert and begun significant preparations.
The
governor scheduled a news conference for noon Monday to further
discuss winter storm preparations.
The
National Weather Service issued a winter weather watch from 7pm
Monday through 7pm Tuesday and a winter storm watch from Tuesday
evening through Thursday morning for the metro Atlanta area.
The
storm has potential to reach beyond Atlanta and Georgia into other
parts of the South. Forecasters said Alabama, which also saw stranded
vehicles and other issues in the January storm, was likely to get a
wintry mix of precipitation. Areas of Mississippi could see three
inches of snow late Monday through noon Tuesday. And a blast of snow
over a wide section of Kentucky slickened roads and closed several
school districts.
Rain
was expected Monday night in north Georgia, with predictions that it
would change to snow by Tuesday morning and mix with sleet during the
day. Snow was expected from Tuesday night through Thursday morning.
Snow will likely accumulate, making driving conditions hazardous.
Emergency
officials throughout the area have been urging residents to prepare
their homes and vehicles.
State
and local officials were widely criticized two weeks ago for what
critics called a sluggish and inadequate response to the threat of
severe weather that left tens of thousands of motorists stuck in
their cars for hours and at least 280 students forced to sleep on
their school buses because of icy, gridlocked roads.
The
governor has apologized and last week announced the formation of a
task force to develop recommendations on how the state can be better
prepared and better equipped the next time severe weather hits metro
Atlanta. He also called for various internal and external reviews and
wants a new public alert system for severe weather, similar to what’s
used for missing and endangered children
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