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    250K without power in Wash. as flood worries rise

    SEATTLE (AP) — A powerful Pacific Northwest storm knocked out power to about 250,000 electric customers around Seattle, Tacoma and Olympia after it coated much of Washington in ice and swelled Oregon rivers, killing a child and two adults. Besides the outages, the big concern now is more flooding in both states with warmer temperatures and rain.

    Most of those affected are customers of Puget Sound Energy, which said it had restored service to 87,000 customers who lost power in the snowstorm that began Wednesday. But the utility it could take into the weekend or later to get the power back on for the roughly quarter million additional homes and businesses still in the dark.

    The National Weather Service said warming temperatures Friday should melt snow and ice in Western Washington lowlands as the forecast returns to normal — rain — into next week. Forecasters said the melting snow could cause urban and small stream flooding and fill the Skokomish and Chehalis rivers above flood stage by Saturday evening.

    It was still snowing in the Cascades, with up to 2 feet possible in the mountains over the weekend. In Eastern Washington, forecasters expect more snow Friday or freezing rain before warming temperatures on Saturday raise the snow level above the valley floors in some areas.

    Washington Gov. Chris Gregoire declared a state of emergency, authorizing the use of National Guard troops if necessary.

    Oregon should see a break in the rainfall for some hours before another front comes in, said meteorologist Paul Tolleson in Portland, Ore.

    "We'll have decent fronts for the next 24 to 36 hours. It'll be just enough rain to make people nervous," he said.

    The unusually strong system temporarily shut down Seattle's airport Thursday. Alaska Airlines and Horizon Air canceled 310 flights to and from Seattle Thursday and Alaska Air said it was canceling 50 flights on Friday.

    The storm knocked down so many trees that Washington State Patrol troopers brought chainsaws in their cruisers to hack through the obstacles.

    It also left three people dead: a mother and her 1-year-old boy, killed after torrential rain swept away a car from an Albany, Ore., grocery store parking lot; and an elderly man fatally injured by a falling tree as he was backing an all-terrain vehicle out of a backyard shed near Seattle.

    More than 50 downed trees on railroad tracks and the threat of more falling forced Amtrak officials to close service between Portland and Seattle on Thursday morning. The closure continued Friday.

    Officials in Spokane declared a snow emergency, banning parking along arterials and bus routes beginning Thursday evening. The City of Seattle asked people to get home before dark if possible, fearing even worse icing conditions by nightfall. And authorities told pedestrians to be extra careful on sidewalks and to look out for "falling ice from trees, buildings and power lines."

    The National Weather Service said the last widespread freezing rain in Seattle was in December 1996.

    The weather system also dropped snow on Washington's Mount Rainier, where four people were reported missing. A search was suspended at nightfall but was to resume Friday.

    In the Willamette Valley town of Scio, Ore., many residents evacuated as the city manager said water was pouring down Main Street.

    Officials in the city of Turner, Ore., issued a voluntary evacuation order to people, asking them to flee to higher ground as floodwaters from the rising Mill Creek swept through town.

    To the west of Oregon's Coast Range, residents were being moved out of Mapleton, Ore., with a population of about 900.

    Near Reno, Nev., winds gusting up to 82 mph pushed a fast-moving brush fire south out of control on Thursday as it burned several homes, threatened dozens more and forced thousands to evacuate their neighborhoods.

    The storm system also brought blowing snow to northwest Colorado as high winds battered the Front Range, with more heavy snow expected over the weekend.

    Meteorologist Mike McFarland at the National Weather Service in Seattle said the system that brought freezing rain was over Minnesota, Wisconsin and parts of Nebraska and Kansas Friday but not packing the same punch.

    "I don't think it looks like a very interesting system back east," he said. "Even though it was interesting here, it's not an extensive storm that will do much of anything anywhere else.

    "It was unusual but not exceptionally potent, otherwise."

    ___

    Cooper reported from Albany, Ore. Associated Press writers Doug Esser, Ted Warren, Shannon Dininny, Rachel La Corte, Nigel Duara and Nicholas K. Geranios contributed to this report.

     
    • Lonnie R  •  4 mths ago
      Mother nature has once again shown us her power and in the process stripped humans of there power . However , the loss of life here is the most saddening and people should be checking on others for there well being and safety .
    • Lydia K  •  4 mths ago
      This same exact thing happened in that area in 1990. The passes were snowed in, the freeway flooded to the south causing truckers to drive 250 miles out of their way to head out of the area, the airport was fogged in. basically, for a few days, Seattle was cut off. IT HAPPENS.
      • Cynthia R 4 mths ago
        Seems like there was one in about 1998, too... I remember 2+ feet of snow @ my parents' house. They couldn't get to our roads with plows for days.
      • A Yahoo! User 4 mths ago
        Nice liberal Seattle hair cut there CY
      • Dawn 4 mths ago
        Hurricanes and tornadoes happen too.
    • Kenny  •  4 mths ago
      I bet motoring was hell and that there was an aweful lot of fender benders on those streets with a steep grade. Seattle has a lot of streets with a very steep grade.
      • Dawn 4 mths ago
        500 accidents in one day! Wednesday, it was.....
      • Lyn 4 mths ago
        more than that.....in a 24 hour period, troopers responded to over 2000 calls, and more than half were traffic related.....and now there is dangerous ice falling off of buildings...scarry... :/
    • BostonBand  •  York, Pennsylvania  •  4 mths ago
      As usual a blunder in Yahoo article - headline on initial page to grab your attention uses "as as" back to back - horrble grammar checks, if any.
    • Loki  •  Hayward, California  •  4 mths ago
      #$%$ I was hoping it was Washington DC.
    • The RiverMaster  •  Knoxville, Tennessee  •  4 mths ago
      The people of the NorthWest have been used to this for hundreds of years. Perhaps it's the "transplanted" journalist that think it's so weird. Hang in there y'all; we prayin' for you.
      • R 4 mths ago
        #$%$ the prayers, they belong to the stone age.throwbacks are still practicing witchcraft prayers with the forces of nature.where is the gangster god delusion bible madness superman right now in the middle of the winter to come , and rescue the people ?
      • Josh 4 mths ago
        @R. Lay off the drugs bro, they are frying your brain.
    • TEEDOFF  •  4 mths ago
      @&it! Thought it was DC. At least we could have saved "The America People" a few bucks for a couple days.
    • teacher  •  4 mths ago
      I just don't think we can blame the weather on karma. We suffered a terrible drought last summer. Was that karma? Or was it a natural event? Those tornadoes cut right through the bible belt last spring. Was that karma too?
      • Mutt 4 mths ago
        Nature.
    • Aziz  •  Anchorage, Alaska  •  4 mths ago
      Imagine, people used to actually live with out electricity. Can you imagine if people actually practiced disaster planning and were prepared in an emergency?
    • Creeper  •  4 mths ago
      I'm not complaining.. I had a week's vacation. Granted, I'm eating toast and top ramen, but what ya gonna do
    • Bruce  •  El Cajon, California  •  4 mths ago
      It's just Mother Nature doing her thing. Which I'm enjoying. Because she has just proven that the Meteorologists, Globle Warming, and the Sky is Falling Nuts Jobs can't predict doo-doo! No matter how much they study and punch their scientific calculators.
    • Michael Johnson  •  4 mths ago
      Man that is messed up no power and really cold I hope they will be ok I will pray for them Amen.
    • TEX  •  Houston, Texas  •  4 mths ago
      I'll bet the beer is cold in Olympia's tap-room.. It's the snow !
    • habib  •  Columbus, Ohio  •  4 mths ago
      I will have been good if it was Washington dc instead of Washington.
    • hardball9  •  Tulsa, Oklahoma  •  4 mths ago
      Wish it was Washington DC instead of Washington State! Might wash all the political garbage and #$%$ out to sea.
    • J  •  4 mths ago
      Hang in there.
    • 0000000000  •  4 mths ago
      Six months from now, we'll be complaining about the abnormal heat too....
    • Beth  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  4 mths ago
      Wild weather !!
    • Blueberry P  •  Lawrence, Massachusetts  •  4 mths ago
      Looks like the NW is getting the winter the NE usually gets,,,
    • Mike  •  Fort Walton Beach, Florida  •  4 mths ago
      Weather is unpredictable. Beer is good for you, scotch is better. Sex is fun.
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