New York winter storm – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Wed, 28 Jan 2026 01:01:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/cropped-Artifex-Round-32x32.png New York winter storm – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Ten people die in New York City’s frigid cold, raising questions about city’s preparedness https://artifex.news/article70559173-ece/ Wed, 28 Jan 2026 01:01:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70559173-ece/ Read More “Ten people die in New York City’s frigid cold, raising questions about city’s preparedness” »

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Snow covers the top of buildings in Manhattan as seen from an observation deck at the Edge at Hudson Yards in New York City, U.S.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

One man was discovered under a layer of snow on a park bench in Queens. Another was found just steps from a Manhattan hospital. Yet another was pronounced dead on the ground beneath an elevated train line in the Bronx.

Each is among a growing number of people — at least 10, as of Tuesday (January 27, 2026) — who died after being exposed to the bitter cold that has persisted in New York City since late last Friday.

Their causes of death are still under investigation, but some showed signs of having succumbed to hypothermia. Officials said several victims were believed to have been living on the streets. At least six of the fatalities came early Saturday, as the temperature in the city fell to minus 13° Celsius.

With the frigid weather expected to continue, Mayor Zohran Mamdani said the city was adding additional homeless outreach workers, opening new warming centres and instructing hospitals to limit discharges “to ensure that people who have nowhere to go are kept indoors.”

But the rising death toll has also prompted questions about whether Mr. Mamdani’s nascent administration could have done more to protect the city’s most vulnerable residents ahead of the Arctic blast and the snowstorm that hit early on Sunday.

One of the victims, a 52-year-old man living in Queens, was found on Sunday morning with discharge papers in his pocket showing he had been released from Elmhurst Hospital, a city-run facility, on Friday, according to State Senator Jessica Ramos.

By the time of his release, the city had already activated its Code Blue protocols, a set of extreme weather policies that include precautions meant to ensure homeless patients are not released back onto the street.

It was not immediately clear if the man, who is originally from Ecuador, had been living outside at the time of his death. Inquiries to City Hall, the Department of Homeless Services and the city’s public hospital system were not returned.

The city has yet to release the names of any of those who died during the storm.

Studies have shown that around 15 people suffer from cold-related deaths in New York City each year. But homeless advocates said they could not remember another storm in recent memory that resulted in so many deaths outside in such a brief period.

“The fact that this many people have passed away shows the city needs to do a much better job of making people feel safe when they come inside,” said David Giffen, the executive director of the Coalition for the Homeless.

“It’s not that most of the people on the streets are unaware of the shelter system, but that they’ve had experiences there that make them not want to return.”

In the lead-up to the storm, city-contracted outreach teams fanned out across the five boroughs, attempting to coax residents to accept placements in shelters, transitional housing or even heated buses. Mr. Mamdani and his deputies have repeatedly urged New Yorkers to look out for those in need of help.

“Extreme weather is not a personal failure, but it is a public responsibility,” Mr. Mamdani said on Tuesday. “We are mobilizing every resource at our disposal to ensure that New Yorkers are brought indoors during this potentially lethal weather event.”

The city’s social services commissioner, Molly Wasow Park, said at least 200 people have voluntarily accepted shelter since the storm began. She said the city has also moved to involuntarily hospitalise a handful of people, including those who were wet, inappropriately dressed or “unable to acknowledge that there are real dangers.”

Ms. Ramos said the man discovered on the park bench was wearing only a thin jacket. His body appeared to be frozen when it was found by police under a layer of snow on Sunday morning.

“It’s devastating to know the government could have done more and didn’t,” she said. “There are real questions here that demand answers.”



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Ice from winter storm leaves million customers without power in U.S. https://artifex.news/article70551824-ece/ Mon, 26 Jan 2026 04:32:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70551824-ece/ Read More “Ice from winter storm leaves million customers without power in U.S.” »

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A massive winter storm dumped sleet, freezing rain and snow across much of the U.S. on Sunday (January 25, 2026), bringing subzero temperatures and paralysing air and road traffic. Tree branches and power lines snapped under the weight of ice, and about a million homes and businesses in the Southeast were left without electricity.

The ice and snowfall were expected to continue into Monday (January 26) in much of the country, followed by very low temperatures, which could cause “dangerous travel and infrastructure impacts” to linger for several days, the National Weather Service said.

Heavy snow was forecast from the Ohio Valley to the Northeast, while “catastrophic ice accumulation” threatened from the Lower Mississippi Valley to the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast.

“It is a unique storm in the sense that it is so widespread,” weather service meteorologist Allison Santorelli said in a phone interview. “It was affecting areas all the way from New Mexico, Texas, all the way into New England, so we’re talking like a 2,000 mile spread.”

President Donald Trump had approved emergency declarations for at least a dozen states by Saturday (January 24). The Federal Emergency Management Agency pre-positioned commodities, staff and search and rescue teams in numerous states, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said.

New York Gov Kathy Hochul said the state was bracing for the longest cold stretch and highest snow totals it has seen in years. Communities near the Canadian border have already seen record-breaking subzero temperatures, with Watertown registering minus 34° Fahrenheit (minus 37° Celsius) and Copenhagen minus 49° F (minus 45° C), she said.

“An Arctic siege has taken over our state,” Ms. Hochul said. “It is brutal, it is bone chilling and it is dangerous.”

In Corinth, Mississippi, where power outages were widespread, Caterpillar told employees at its remanufacturing site to stay home Monday (January 26) and Tuesday (January 27).

“May God have mercy on Corinth, MS! … The sound of the trees snapping, exploding & falling through the night have been unnerving to say the least,” resident Kathy Ragan wrote on Facebook.

On the east side of Nashville, Jami Joe, 41, had power on Sunday (January 25) afternoon but she feared the juice might not last long as ice-heavy limbs from mature oak and pecan trees continued to crash around her house. “It’s only a matter of time if a limb strikes a power line,” she predicted.

In Little Rock, Arkansas, officials say the weight of accumulated snow and sleet likely caused the collapse of an awning onto several houseboats. Six people were rescued and 22 were evacuated, Pulaski County officials said.

As of Sunday (January 25) morning, about 213 million people were under some sort of winter weather warning, Ms. Santorelli said. The number of customers without power stood at about 1 million, according to poweroutage.us.

Tennessee was hardest hit with about 337,000 customers out by midday on Sunday (January 25), and Louisiana and Mississippi all had more than 100,000 customers in the dark. Tens of thousands of homes and businesses were without power in Kentucky, Georgia, Alabama, and West Virginia.

Some 11,000 flights were cancelled on Sunday (January 25) and more than 14,000 delayed, according to the flight tracker flightaware.com. Airports in Philadelphia, Washington, Baltimore, North Carolina, New York, and New Jersey were hit especially hard.

At Philadelphia International Airport, inside displays registered scores of cancelled flights and few vehicles could be seen arriving on Sunday (January 25) morning. At Reagan National in Washington, virtually all flights were cancelled.

Even once the ice and snow stop falling, the danger will continue, Ms. Santorelli warned.

“Behind the storm it’s just going to get bitterly cold across basically the entirety of the eastern two-thirds of the nation, east of the Rockies,” she said. That means the ice and snow won’t melt as fast, which could hinder some efforts to restore power and other infrastructure.

Along the Gulf Coast, temperatures were balmy on Sunday (January 25), hitting the high 60s and low 70s, but thermometers were expected to drop into the high 20s and low 30s there by Monday morning. The National Weather Service warned of damaging winds and a slight risk of severe storms and possibly even a brief tornado.

In New York City, Mayor Zohran Mamdani said at least five people who died were found outside as temperatures plunged on Saturday (January 24) before the snows arrived in earnest, though the cause of their deaths remained under investigation.

The Democrat pleaded with New Yorkers to stay inside and off roads: “We want every single New Yorker to make it through this storm.”

Two men died of hypothermia related to the storm in Caddo Parish in Louisiana, according to the state health department there.

Across the affected areas, officials announced that school would be cancelled or held remotely on Monday (January 26).

In Oxford, Mississippi, police on Sunday (January 25) morning used social media to tell residents to stay home as the danger of being outside was too great. Local utility crews were also pulled from their jobs during the overnight hours.

“Due to life-threatening conditions, Oxford Utilities has made the difficult decision to pull our crews off the road for the night,” the utility company posted on Facebook early on Sunday (January 25). “Trees are actively snapping and falling around our linemen while they are in the bucket trucks.”

Tippah Electric Power in Mississippi said there was “catastrophic damage” and that it could be “weeks instead of days” to restore everyone.

The Tennessee Valley Authority provides power to some utilities across the region, and spokesperson Scott Brooks said the bulk power system remains stable but overnight icing had caused power interruptions in north Mississippi, north Alabama, southern middle Tennessee and the Knoxville, Tennessee, area.

Icy roads made travel dangerous in north Georgia, where the Cherokee County Sheriff’s office posted on Facebook, “You know it’s bad when Waffle House is closed!!!” along with a photo of a shuttered restaurant. Whether the chain’s restaurants are open — known as the Waffle House Index — has become an informal way to gauge the severity of weather disasters across the South.



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