DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Fear and Anger Grow as Thousands Remain Without Power in the South

February 2, 2026
in News
Fear and Anger Grow as Thousands Remain Without Power in the South

The flurries, for a brief time, fell again on Sunday.

The snow landed on piles of jagged branches and sawed stumps, tangled power lines and the tens of thousands of people who have now gone a week without power or heat after a widespread ice storm knocked out power lines across the region.

By Sunday, the weeklong paralysis from the storm across Tennessee, Mississippi and Louisiana had given way to weariness, anger and fear about how much longer thousands would be struggling to stay warm and fed without power. At least three dozen people have died across the three states in connection with the storm, officials have said.

Hurricanes and tornadoes, particularly in the South, often cause prolonged power outages, and residents are accustomed to going days without electricity. But it is rare to experience a loss of power during a sustained stretch of ice and freezing temperatures, with cold so fierce that it has left hundreds of workers struggling to navigate icy roads as they try to fix the electrical system.

Anger was continuing to boil over toward the leadership of the Nashville Electric Service. The utility has struggled for days not only to restore power across the city and surrounding county, but also to accurately communicate to customers the scope of the repairs and the timeline needed to complete them.

Nashville accounts for a majority of the power outages in Tennessee, with about 33,000 customers still without power as of early Sunday afternoon. On Saturday, the agency acknowledged that it may take at least another week for some neighborhoods to return to full power, with at least one ZIP code predicted not to see full service restored until Feb. 11.

“Nashvillians are justifiably angry,” Mayor Freddie O’Connell of Nashville, a Democrat, said in a statement. “It is critical to the life, safety and well-being of our residents that N.E.S. use every tool at their disposal to increase the pace, improve communication and get Nashvillians’ power back on.”

At grocery stores and restaurants, as residents tried to replace spoiled groceries or secure a hot meal, strangers asked one another about how they were faring and if they needed help. Organizations, community groups and neighbors were spending another weekend trying to feed and house the most vulnerable across the region. Friends were opening their basements and spare rooms, while some families decamped for homes out of state.

“Everyone has been touched by this,” said Terry Vo, a Nashville councilwoman who lost power for four days and spent Sunday coordinating the distribution of free tacos in her district. “Everyone has felt what it is like to be without, and have no control.”

“A lot of people are on their wit’s end,” she added.

Even among those who had their power restored, there were still scars from the days of uncertainty.

“We’ve just never been out completely,” said Monique Turner, 44, wiping away tears as she spoke about trying to keep her family together as they bounced from house to house to avoid the cold. She added that she remained frustrated and tired, especially when confronted with how to replace the loss of hundreds of dollars of food in her home.

There were also fears that the prolonged cold would continue to affect the state’s most vulnerable residents. Dozens of cases of carbon monoxide poisoning have been reported to the Tennessee Poison Center hotline as some residents turn to alternative power sources like generators. And for residents who may have to bear the brunt of repairing home electric meters or damaged cars and property, the expenses are mounting.

In northeast Louisiana, where poverty rates are already higher than the rest of the state, applications for assistance have grown to more than 7,100 in a span of 24 hours, the United Way of Northeast Louisiana said.

“It’s just the beginning for some people — they’re already in the hole,” Kim Lowery, the president and chief executive of the United Way of Northeast Louisiana, said in an interview. “They’re behind on the rent. They’re behind on the utilities. They have to replace all the food they lost.”

“It hurts my heart so much what we’re seeing,” Ms. Lowery added. Her daughter, son-in-law and two grandchildren were on their eighth day without power and were now staying in Ms. Lowery’s home, she said.

Gov. Tate Reeves, Republican of Mississippi, said that he had extended the deployment of nearly 700 National Guard troops for another week, and that 1,200 residents were in nearly 90 warming shelters and centers across the state.

In Tennessee, Gov. Bill Lee, a Republican, asked President Trump to approve an expedited disaster declaration for the state to unlock additional federal aid. He is among the lawmakers in Tennessee who voiced frustration with the Nashville Electric Service for its response to the storm, which the service said was the largest outage in its history.

“It has been a devastating week,” Teresa Broyles-Aplin, the president and chief executive of the Nashville Electric Service, said in a video shared on social media. She added, “We will not stop until we have restored power to every customer.”

Mayor O’Connell, who initially shied away from criticizing the agency in the early days of the response, on Saturday called the time frame “unacceptable” and demanded a meeting on Sunday with leaders.

Senator Marsha Blackburn, Republican of Tennessee, was more blunt in her own statement: “Whoever is responsible for this breakdown should be fired.”

Emily Cochrane is a national reporter for The Times covering the American South, based in Nashville.

The post Fear and Anger Grow as Thousands Remain Without Power in the South appeared first on New York Times.

Tina Smith endorses Peggy Flanagan over Angie Craig in Minnesota Senate race
News

Tina Smith endorses Peggy Flanagan over Angie Craig in Minnesota Senate race

by Politico
February 2, 2026

Sen. Tina Smith is endorsing Minnesota Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan as her successor over Rep. Angie Craig, taking sides in ...

Read more
News

Are Models Getting Even Skinnier?

February 2, 2026
News

Trump Desperately Tries to Juice ‘Melania’ Doc After Box Office Flop

February 2, 2026
News

Slumping in the West, the Art Trade Eyes the Gulf

February 2, 2026
News

Pledge to invest $100 billion in OpenAI was ‘never a commitment,’ says Nvidia’s Huang

February 2, 2026
Icemageddon, Southern Style

Icemageddon, Southern Style

February 2, 2026
The World’s Best Food Cities That Haven’t Been Ruined by TikTok Yet

The World’s Best Food Cities That Haven’t Been Ruined by TikTok Yet

February 2, 2026
Why billionaire investor Thomas Kaplan isn’t stressing about gold and silver’s historic sell-off

Why billionaire investor Thomas Kaplan isn’t stressing about gold and silver’s historic sell-off

February 2, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026