Tuesday, January 02, 2007

Leger Vs word ingezet bij extreme aanhoudende sneeuwval Colorado, Denver Vs


National Guard drops food for stranded people


POSTED: 4:53 p.m. EST, January 2, 2007
var clickExpire = "02/1/2007";
Story Highlights• NEW: National Guard drops food and hay for people, livestock• NEW: More than 25,000 without power in four states• Fear that cattle starving to death • Hotels filled with people whose homes lost power
Adjust font size:
DENVER, Colorado (AP) -- National Guard helicopters dropped bundles of food for people and hay for livestock trapped by snowdrifts as high as rooftops Tuesday.
Back-to-back blizzards paralyzed the Plains and caused at least a dozen deaths.
The storm knocked out electricity to tens of thousand of people in Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska and Oklahoma and left herds of cattle without food or water.
The blizzard spread a blanket of snow on top of the icy layer left by a storm that hit just before Christmas.
Because of rising temperatures, many highways across the region were clear.
But many rural roads remained impassable, and members of the National Guard used Humvees and snowmobiles to reach people trapped in their homes and take them to shelters.

Colorado also launched a haylift in hopes of saving thousands of cattle immobilized by drifts as high as 10 feet.
In 1997, a similar storm killed 30,000 cattle in the state.
"Most of my cattle haven't seen food since last Thursday, when the snow started," said Tony Hall, who has 200 head on a Colorado ranch near Lamar.
"Wherever they were standing when the snow piled up, that's where they are now. Every day, it's getting more crucial."
Colorado was competing with Kansas to find enough helicopters capable of hauling hay bales that weigh up to 1,300 pounds, said Don Ament, Colorado's agriculture director.
Many helicopters in the state's National Guard fleet are in the Middle East.
"These cattle have already gone a number of days without food and water. They're just going to lay over dead if we don't do something soon," Ament said.
National Guard helicopters in Colorado also dropped Meals Ready to Eat, or military rations, just outside people's houses so that they could reach the bundles, Sgt. Steve Segin said.
In the Oklahoma Panhandle, a dozen troops went door to door in Humvees, checking on rural residents snowed in without power for days.
Col. Pat Scully said the priority was to reach people on ranches and farms who might have medical problems.
"We have no reason to believe anybody is hurt, but we did think it was necessary to do some welfare checks," said Michelann Ooten, spokeswoman for the Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management.
Ice in some areas was even more difficult to deal with than the snow, snapping trees and bringing down power lines.
In Nebraska, big portable generators were set up to maintain water service and keep emergency shelters open.
At least 6,300 homes and businesses in western Kansas were without power, along with an estimated 15,000 in Nebraska and more than 6,000 in Colorado and Oklahoma.
Some utility officials warned it could take weeks to restore electricity.
Every motel in the western Nebraska town of Kearney was full with people who had no electricity at home.
Patrick Keough, 49, was one of 10 people in his family sharing three rooms at the Kearney Ramada Inn.
At his home east of Kearney, there was no power at his house or shop, where he makes fiberglass animals.
"Hardly anybody got any snow," Keough said Tuesday. "It's all just ice. Even the gravel roads are a sheet of ice, because the gravel is below the level of the ice. I've never seen that in my life."
Power poles are snapped off for miles around, he said, and he was told not to expect any power for at least three weeks.
Ten traffic deaths were blamed on the latest storm that affected Colorado, Texas and Minnesota.
A tornado spun off by the same weather system killed one person in Texas, and a Kansas man died in a rural home where a generator was apparently being used because the power was out