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WASHINGTON 500,000 cribs recalle...
Appeals for cooperation fall on deaf ears in D.C.
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Police debate use of relatives' DNA
Snow socks Washington, but essential work is done
Republicans set sights on Murtha's Pa. district
Killer talks of Kansas abortion doc's death on YouTube
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Man robbed at Tallmadge Avenue eatery
Another winter punch heading toward Ohio
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Region makes way for latest batch of snow; cancellations rise
Cuyahoga Falls residents come home to find burning couch on balcony
Blogs:
First Bell - On Education:
No City of Akron basketball tonight
Pets:
Pet telethon re-airs
The Heldenfiles:
Chipmunks "Squeakquel" on DVD/BD March 30
Akron Zips:
Late surge gives Zips ugly road win
Tribe Matters:
Blogmail response on Hafner
Cleveland Browns:
Stallworth's contract terminated
Balanced Ledger:
QB in Browns future: another mock draft
Kent State Sports:
KSU Notes – February 9
Cleveland Cavaliers:
NBA Power Rankings from Around the Internet
Buckeye Blogging:
Buckeyes grab 18 players on signing day
Varsity Letters:
Garfield at Buchtel basketball
All Da King's Men:
Palin At The Tea Party Convention
Blog of Mass Destruction:
Republican Pre-Conditions
Akron Law Café:
Citizens United v. F.E.C. (Part 4): Kennedy's and O'Connor's Basic Approaches to Constitutional Decisionmaking – Top Down and Bottom Up
Car Chase:
Collector Car Hobby Loses One of the Best—Jim Roll
Let's Talk Real Estate:
Decisions Decisions: Credit Cards or Your Mortgage?
Ohio Travels with Betty:
Loucile is looking for a Lake Erie getaway in June for three kids, ages 1, 3, and 5.
Sound Check:
Talk of the Town – Top entertainment picks for the weekend
HRLite House:
Track HR Research
Akron Gamer:
Makers of 'Castle Crashers' unveil 'BattleBlock Theater'
See Jane Style:
Do IT this week: Layering
By Roger Alford
Associated Press
POSTED: 09:38 a.m. EST, Feb 02, 2009
CANEYVILLE, KY.: Kentucky's governor warned it will be ''a long haul'' before life returns to normal after last week's deadly ice storm that cut power to hundreds of thousands and blocked roads with fallen trees and other debris.
Officials in the state's two largest cities, Lexington and Louisville, reported progress. Lexington Mayor Jim Newberry deactivated the city's Emergency Operations Center on Sunday evening after a sharp drop in the number of homes without electricity.
But residents in more remote areas, particularly in western Kentucky, are looking at a more uncertain future shivering in homes without electricity and heat.
At its height, the storm knocked out power to 1.3 million customers from the Southern Plains to the East Coast. More than 700,000 of those were in Kentucky a state record but by Sunday night, that figure had dropped to less than half that. Still, it could be weeks before some people have power again.
''It's going to be a long haul for us,'' Gov. Steve Beshear, a Democrat, said Sunday as he toured hard-hit areas in and around Elizabethtown. ''We've thrown everything we have at it. We're going to continue to do that until everyone is back in their homes and back on their feet.''
The winter blast has been blamed for more than 40 deaths in nine states. Officials confirmed at least 16 deaths in Kentucky, most from traffic crashes, hypothermia and carbon monoxide poisoning from improperly used generators.
Thousands of Kentucky National Guard troops, some wielding chain saws, cleared out debris-ridden communities and rolled through neighborhoods in Humvees to deliver chili and stew rations to relieved residents.
''The kids were looking out the windows and yelling, 'Yay! We're saved!''' said Bryan Bowling, 30, who's been hunkering down with 18 people next to a fireplace inside his generator-powered home in rural Grayson county, some 90 miles southwest of Louisville.
''It's just good to know that people care,'' said Bowling, who has a 7-year-old and a 4-year-old.
Emergency generators were in demand, and 52-year-old David Strange was out Sunday installing the units at rural homes in west Kentucky. Strange bought 200 generators and was selling them for markups of around $50 to $100, including delivery down remote country lanes, earning the nickname ''the generator man.''
On Sunday, his customers included an elderly couple fearful they couldn't run a dialysis machine. ''I just don't know how to put what he's done for us into words,'' said Janeen Timmons, 62, the dialysis patient.
Arkansas, Indiana and other states lashed by the storm were also working to recover. Crews in Arkansas worked to rebuild parts of the system to restore power to some 130,000 customers, and nearly 25,000 homes and businesses in Indiana remained without power.
By Sunday night, 93 of Kentucky's 120 counties along with 71 cities had declared a state of emergency, according to Monica French, a spokeswoman for the Kentucky Division of Emergency Management.
The 4,600 soldiers Beshear ordered on duty, including his entire Army National Guard, swept through the state distributing food and water, removing fallen trees, providing security and checking houses in hard-to-reach areas.
In Hardinsburg, one door-to-door check of houses without electricity is being credited for saving the lives of an elderly couple. The Kentucky National Guard said in a press release that two airmen visited the couple's home Sunday and found the wife apparently confused and the husband complaining of nausea.
Both were treated and released at a hospital. Authorities said carbon monoxide levels were more than twice what is considered lethal, and blamed the poisoning on a faulty gas furnace.
Diana Burba was among thousands of people who received cases of bottled water from the National Guard. Burba has no power, and she can't drink the muck coming out of her faucet.
''It's like muddy water comes out,'' Burba said in her Bonnieville mobile home.
''You don't know how much you depend on it,'' she said of amenities like clean water and electricity. ''When you don't have it, life kind of halts.''
The troops, utility workers and good-natured civilians took advantage of temperatures near 50 across much of the region to make headway on repairs. The National Weather Service warned the melt could cause some flooding, but temperatures could dip back into the 20s and teens by tonight.
Still, the governor praised the resilience of residents in dire need, even as they faced the prospect of a long thaw.
In the town of Clinton, tucked in the tip of western Kentucky, Spc. Michael Hagan had yet to find a person in need of help after four hours of searching, but he said he'd keep knocking on doors.
''I told my sergeant if I have to walk one more hill, my feet are going to fall off,'' said the 23-year-old guardsman, who returned from 18 months in Iraq in December. ''But it's good to be sure people are all right.''
Associated Press writers Janet Cappiello Blake in Louisville, Ky., John Moreno Gonzales in Clinton, Ky., and Jeffrey McMurray in Elizabethtown, Ky., contributed to this report.
CANEYVILLE, KY.: Kentucky's governor warned it will be ''a long haul'' before life returns to normal after last week's deadly ice storm that cut power to hundreds of thousands and blocked roads with fallen trees and other debris.
Officials in the state's two largest cities, Lexington and Louisville, reported progress. Lexington Mayor Jim Newberry deactivated the city's Emergency Operations Center on Sunday evening after a sharp drop in the number of homes without electricity.
But residents in more remote areas, particularly in western Kentucky, are looking at a more uncertain future shivering in homes without electricity and heat.
At its height, the storm knocked out power to 1.3 million customers from the Southern Plains to the East Coast. More than 700,000 of those were in Kentucky a state record but by Sunday night, that figure had dropped to less than half that. Still, it could be weeks before some people have power again.
''It's going to be a long haul for us,'' Gov. Steve Beshear, a Democrat, said Sunday as he toured hard-hit areas in and around Elizabethtown. ''We've thrown everything we have at it. We're going to continue to do that until everyone is back in their homes and back on their feet.''
The winter blast has been blamed for more than 40 deaths in nine states. Officials confirmed at least 16 deaths in Kentucky, most from traffic crashes, hypothermia and carbon monoxide poisoning from improperly used generators.
Thousands of Kentucky National Guard troops, some wielding chain saws, cleared out debris-ridden communities and rolled through neighborhoods in Humvees to deliver chili and stew rations to relieved residents.
''The kids were looking out the windows and yelling, 'Yay! We're saved!''' said Bryan Bowling, 30, who's been hunkering down with 18 people next to a fireplace inside his generator-powered home in rural Grayson county, some 90 miles southwest of Louisville.
''It's just good to know that people care,'' said Bowling, who has a 7-year-old and a 4-year-old.
Emergency generators were in demand, and 52-year-old David Strange was out Sunday installing the units at rural homes in west Kentucky. Strange bought 200 generators and was selling them for markups of around $50 to $100, including delivery down remote country lanes, earning the nickname ''the generator man.''
On Sunday, his customers included an elderly couple fearful they couldn't run a dialysis machine. ''I just don't know how to put what he's done for us into words,'' said Janeen Timmons, 62, the dialysis patient.
Arkansas, Indiana and other states lashed by the storm were also working to recover. Crews in Arkansas worked to rebuild parts of the system to restore power to some 130,000 customers, and nearly 25,000 homes and businesses in Indiana remained without power.
By Sunday night, 93 of Kentucky's 120 counties along with 71 cities had declared a state of emergency, according to Monica French, a spokeswoman for the Kentucky Division of Emergency Management.
The 4,600 soldiers Beshear ordered on duty, including his entire Army National Guard, swept through the state distributing food and water, removing fallen trees, providing security and checking houses in hard-to-reach areas.
In Hardinsburg, one door-to-door check of houses without electricity is being credited for saving the lives of an elderly couple. The Kentucky National Guard said in a press release that two airmen visited the couple's home Sunday and found the wife apparently confused and the husband complaining of nausea.
Both were treated and released at a hospital. Authorities said carbon monoxide levels were more than twice what is considered lethal, and blamed the poisoning on a faulty gas furnace.
Diana Burba was among thousands of people who received cases of bottled water from the National Guard. Burba has no power, and she can't drink the muck coming out of her faucet.
''It's like muddy water comes out,'' Burba said in her Bonnieville mobile home.
''You don't know how much you depend on it,'' she said of amenities like clean water and electricity. ''When you don't have it, life kind of halts.''
The troops, utility workers and good-natured civilians took advantage of temperatures near 50 across much of the region to make headway on repairs. The National Weather Service warned the melt could cause some flooding, but temperatures could dip back into the 20s and teens by tonight.
Still, the governor praised the resilience of residents in dire need, even as they faced the prospect of a long thaw.
In the town of Clinton, tucked in the tip of western Kentucky, Spc. Michael Hagan had yet to find a person in need of help after four hours of searching, but he said he'd keep knocking on doors.
''I told my sergeant if I have to walk one more hill, my feet are going to fall off,'' said the 23-year-old guardsman, who returned from 18 months in Iraq in December. ''But it's good to be sure people are all right.''
Associated Press writers Janet Cappiello Blake in Louisville, Ky., John Moreno Gonzales in Clinton, Ky., and Jeffrey McMurray in Elizabethtown, Ky., contributed to this report.
hey, al gore, so much for global warming !!!!!!!!!
where is FEMA???
