A Birmingham, Alabama brain surgeon is being hailed as a hero after he defied the harsh winter storm that shut down the town to answer the call for an emergency.
Dr. Zenko Hrynkiw received a call while attending patients at Brookwood Medical Center that he was needed miles away at Trinity Medical Center for emergency surgery. Dr. Hrynkiw is the only brain surgeon on staff for Trinity Medical Center.
The neurosurgeon rushed to his car and attempted to drive to the other hospital only to find he was trapped a few blocks away by abandoned cars and traffic because of the massive snowstorm that blanketed the city.
So the doctor called Trinity on his fading cell phone and said that he would be walking.
The charge nurse at Trinity called local police to have them on the lookout for the doctor but despite a few reported sightings no one was able to find him. Hours later, the doctor called from inside the hospital after making the over 6-mile trek.
Dr. Hrynkiw rushed to the family’s side to get health information and then rushed in to complete the surgery for a traumatic brain injury. Hospital officials say that the patient would have most likely died if it wasn’t for the doctor arriving when he did to perform the surgery.
Winter weather shocked the Deep South on Tuesday, leaving many communities without power and roads completely impassable for most cars.
The National Guard had to be called out to bring supplies to area schools where children were forced to spend the night in gymnasiums with teachers. Military Humvees are being used to move school buses that were stranded on highways.
Nearly all public entities and most businesses were shut down in the Atlanta area early Wednesday because of the winter conditions.
The weather conditions across the south led to people abandoning their vehicles on highways from Mississippi to the Florida panhandle.
Thousands of churches opened their sanctuaries to motorists who were stranded by the weather. Action Church of Canton, Georgia told the Associated Press that they had close to 20 people that were stranded near them come in for food, warmth and shelter.
Suburban Atlanta police even had to deliver a baby on the interstate when the mother was unable to make it to the hospital. Mother and baby were both fine.
A third “polar vortex” is aiming at the U.S. this week and it could bring the lowest temperatures of this winter’s trio of storms.
The forecast models show the frigid arctic air reaching into northern Mexico and all the way to south-central Florida. Parts of the Gulf of Mexico could see temperatures well below freezing.
The vortex is also expected to be longer than the previous two, lasting almost three days in some regions. Cities in the upper to central Midwest could be facing lows below zero for consecutive days with wind chills that could reach -50 degrees.
The National Weather Service said it could actually be warmer in the nation’s northernmost city, Barrow, Alaska, than it could be in most of the Midwest. Barrow’s predicted high for Monday is -4 degrees. That is the same predicted high for Chicago.
Forecasters say the temperature without wind chill could reach -17 degrees downtown. Wind chills could surge past -40 degrees.
In the northern Midwest, residents faced an additional problem as high winds blew snow to the point it made travel impossible.
Officials across the Midwest are encouraging residents to stay inside for the next two days and avoid travel unless absolutely necessary.
Southern Texas is facing a rare coating of ice as temperatures continue to plummet to record lows.
“The crazy thing is that the current cold snap this week looks to be a bit more modest in the face of next week’s outbreak,” Matt Rogers of the Commodity Weather Group told Bloomberg. “The cold coming for the end of January is sufficient to make this the coldest month of the century so far and the coldest the Lower 48 has felt in at least 20 years.”
Interstate 10 from Texas to Louisiana had to be closed because ice on the highway caused multiple accidents. State police warned residents to avoid the roadways as conditions deteriorated through the day Thursday and into Friday.
At least two deaths have been attributed to the icy accidents.
Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal declared a state of emergency because of the storm.
Texas officials are warning residents Friday that even if the winter weather warnings have been lifted, roads and bridges can freeze and be ice covered after dark.
Another polar blast is heading toward the eastern United States and could bring heavy snow to the northeast.
The storm through the day Tuesday is predicted to bring up to 12 inches of snow to the eastern seaboard from Virginia to Massachusetts. The storm will also bring heavy winds that could cause snowdrifts, poor travel conditions and downed power lines.
The Federal Government shut offices for Tuesday in preparation for the storm’s arrival. Forecast models called for 6 to 10 inches in the capital.
In addition to the snow and winds, the storm will bring cold temperatures far into the south. Forecasters call for lows in the teens from towns as far south as Memphis, Tennessee through the entire northern part of the country.
Temperatures across the eastern U.S. could be as much as 25 degrees lower than normal for this time of year.
The BBC reports that during Tuesday’s 24 hour time period every single U.S. state had one location posting a temperature below freezing.
Temperatures ranged from -31 degrees in International Falls, Minnesota to 25 at the top of Mauna Kea volcano in Hawaii.
Schools throughout the Midwest from Minnesota to Texas closed because of cold weather conditions. Communities not used to severe freezing such as Memphis, Tennessee saw a wave of homeowners scrambling to deal with pipes broken by the extreme cold.
Over 7,000 flights have now been cancelled across the United States through Tuesday evening.
There are indications of a significant warm-up approaching most of the Midwest, however a severe winter storm in the Rocky Mountains could bring up to a foot of snow across Oklahoma, Kansas and the central Midwest this weekend.
The record-setting polar vortex not only broke temperature records throughout the United States but also threatened the nation’s power grid and transportation systems.
Forecasters say that the frigid temperatures from the polar vortex will impact 187 million people or almost 59% of the entire United States population.
Amtrak said at least 500 passengers were stranded on trains stuck in high snow or incapacitated by extreme cold in areas around Chicago. Trains from Los Angeles, San Francisco and Quincy, Illinois could not make it into Chicago because of impassable conditions.
Airports in Chicago, New York, Philadelphia, Boston and other major Midwest and East Coast cities cancelled thousands of flights because of cold temperatures.
Power officials from Texas to Maine expressed concern about the pull on the nation’s power grid. Multiple utility systems are reporting the highest levels of draw in four to six months along with extensive increases in natural gas use. Government officials have been telling residents to stay in their homes because of the bitter cold.
Several major cities faced significant power outages such as Indianapolis where tens of thousands of homes were left in the dark.
Canadians are experiencing a rare phenomenon as part of the polar vortex that has descended over the central part of North America.
Meteorologists call the incidents “frost quakes” and they can produce a sound as strong as a sonic boom.
The “quakes” happen when ice and rain seep into the ground and then the temperature falls so low that it freezes, causing the earth to split open as during an earthquake.
The phenomenon shocked residents of Toronto who thought someone was breaking into their homes or that gunfire had erupted in their neighborhoods. Toronto police reported hundreds of calls from worried residents over loud, unexplained noises.
Some residents told London’s Daily Mail that the quakes were strong enough to wake them from sleep and make dishes rattle.
Officials in some parts of the upper Midwest were telling residents to just stay home instead of venturing out into potentially deadly weather conditions.
Wind chills across North Dakota and Minnesota have reached as much as 70 degrees below zero causing exposed skin to freeze in minutes. The state of Minnesota called off school for extreme cold for the first time in 17 years because of the anticipated wind chills.
Temperatures dove across the entire country from International Falls, Minnesota at -28 degrees overnight to 27 degrees along the Gulf of Mexico in Biloxi, Mississippi.
The temperatures were so cold in Chicago that thousands of flights had to be delayed or cancelled. Nationwide, around 3,530 flights were delayed and over 2,500 had to be cancelled.
In addition to the frigid temperatures, icy road conditions led to hundreds of accidents nationwide. Power outages are spotty through the northeast because of wet power lines icing in the frigid conditions.
A massive winter storm that has brought snow over New England for the last 36 hours will end up dumping as much as 30 inches of snow in parts of Boston.
The storm has also brought temperatures in the dangerous range.
Most communities across the northeast are reporting temperatures that are topping out in the single digits above zero with wind chills significantly below zero.
New York City told residents to stay home until the storm ends. Meteorologists with the National Weather Service said the wind chill through the northeast corridor is so low that exposed skin could start to freeze in 15 minutes.
School districts across the region were closed to keep children safe.
Officials believe that temperatures will rise into the 40s on Sunday with rain helping to clear roads.