Welcome to
Помоги природе! Стань сторонником Гринпис


Навигация
Главная
Files (Файлы)
Links (Ссылки)
Monitoring (Мониторинг)
Recommend Us
Search (Поиск)
Stories Archive
Surveys (Опросы)
Topics (Темы)
Документы


Наш опрос
Что важнее для Вас?

Финансовый кризис
Изменение климата
Эти проблемы одинаково важны
Я не считаю их проблемой вообще



Результаты
Все опросы

Все опросы: 283
Комментариев: 0


Архив новостей
· Загрязнения в Южной Азии негативно отразится на климате планеты
· Представители крупных стран мира обсудят план борьбы с изменением климата
· Мир на день постарается отказаться от пользования личным транспортом
· Уровень Мирового океана к 2100 году повысится меньше чем на 2 метра
· Через Северный полюс можно плавать
· Изменение климата влияет на продолжительность жизни

Читать далее...


Реклама
WWF Russia




Факты и цифры
Основной канал молнии имеет несколько ответвлений длиной 2-3 км.


Рекомендуем

Словарь терминов



Топ поиска

Отличные детские автокресла очень недорого. или У нас развивающие игрушки в ассортименте. или Дома проекты купить. Планировка и готовые проекты коттеджей проекты типовых домов.


Язык
Выберете язык интерфейса:

English Russian

  

Troops aid motorists stranded by winter storm
Posted on Friday, February 16 @ 10:55:04 MSK
Topic: World(Global) warming news (english)
  
  A Berlin, Vermont, highway crew tries to move a front-end loader that slid off the road on Thursday.
  A Berlin, Vermont, highway crew tries to move a front-end loader that slid off the road on Thursday.

National Guardsmen in Humvees ferried food, fuel and baby supplies Thursday to hundreds of motorists stranded on a 50-mile stretch of highway for nearly a day by a monster storm blamed for 15 deaths.
The traffic jam on the icy, hilly section of Interstate 78 in eastern Pennsylvania forced authorities to also shut down portions of I-81 and I-80 Thursday afternoon as they struggled to gain ground on the colossal traffic jam.
Drivers were frustrated they were let on the road at all. State police did not close all the entrance ramps to I-78 until around 5 p.m., more than 24 hours after vehicles starting getting caught.


"Why would they have that exit open if they were just going to let us sit there?" said a crying Deborah Miller. Her 5-year-old son was trapped in the car with her, running a 103-degree fever from strep throat.

The sprawling storm system hit Wednesday and blew out to sea Thursday, leaving huge snow piles, frigid temperatures and tens of thousands without power across the Midwest and Northeast.

Numerous areas saw more than a foot of snow, with 42 inches falling in the southern Adirondacks in New York.

Gusty wind had morning wind chills below zero, and in some areas, the snow was followed by several inches of ice.

A few flights were canceled Thursday after numerous cancellations Wednesday, and many school districts that had canceled classes Wednesday extended the unplanned vacation by an extra day.

The National Guard's aid operation ended once the stranded vehicles were cleared from I-78 Thursday evening. Some vehicles -- mostly trucks -- were still being towed after becoming stuck in sections of the other two highways, Pennsylvania transportation officials said.

Road-clearing operations were expected to continue through the night and into the morning. Transportation spokesman Sean Brown said he could not say when the roads would reopen. (Watch where a new "snow maker" is headed Friday )

Eugene Coleman, who is hyperglycemic, was trapped for 20 hours while on his way home to Hartford, Connecticut, from visiting his terminally ill mother in Georgia, along with his girlfriend and pregnant daughter.

"How could you operate a state like this? It's totally disgusting," Coleman said. "God forbid somebody gets really stuck on the highway and has a life-threatening emergency. That person would have died."

Authorities also were flooded with calls from frustrated motorists wanting to know why the road hadn't reopened.

Police said they took fuel to some motorists and food to others, including several diabetics who called 911.

The storm system killed three in Nebraska; two each in Indiana, New Jersey and Delaware; and one each in Louisiana, Missouri, New York, Ohio, Virginia and New Hampshire. Businesses try to make the best of it

Amtrak canceled some service west of Albany on Thursday because blowing snow was interfering with switching and signals.

Businesses that closed during the snowy onslaught reopened Thursday morning, but customers were slow in coming. Professor Java's in Albany -- normally buzzing with customers on weekday mornings -- had only two men sipping coffee.

Employees of Burton Snowboards in Burlington, Vermont, got the day off Thursday after more than 25 inches of snow fell Wednesday.

"Nothing makes me happier than giving the people who work here the opportunity to experience the essence of a sport that they are making accessible and fun for so many others," founder Jake Burton said.

 

Связанные ссылки
· Больше про World(Global) warming news (english)
· Новости от administrator


Самая читаемая статья о World(Global) warming news (english):



Опции
 Страница, готовая для печати Страница, готовая для печати  

Google
 

Связанные темы

Мировое(глобальное) потепление (russian)

Извините, комментарии не разрешены для этой статьи.

Открытие страницы: 0.50 секунды
Всё об экологии в одном месте: Всероссийский Экологический Портал PageRank индикатор