Wintry weather blanketing U.S. to make rare dip to Gulf Coast

The mass vaccination clinic put on by Medical Center Hospital and the City of Odessa at Ratliff Stadium is seen covered in snow and ice Saturday in Midland, Texas. Subfreezing temperatures are expected in all of Texas, according to the National Weather Service, and snowfall totals of up to 8 inches are forecast in the Dallas area. Up to 2 inches could fall in the Houston area.
The mass vaccination clinic put on by Medical Center Hospital and the City of Odessa at Ratliff Stadium is seen covered in snow and ice Saturday in Midland, Texas. Subfreezing temperatures are expected in all of Texas, according to the National Weather Service, and snowfall totals of up to 8 inches are forecast in the Dallas area. Up to 2 inches could fall in the Houston area.

DALLAS - Wintry weather is forecast for much of the U.S. on Sunday, with freezing temperatures expected to dip as snow falls as far south as Texas' Gulf Coast.
"Typically, we just don't have quite this much cold air in place that far south," said Marc Chenard, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service's Weather Prediction Center.
The storm has prompted officials in Houston, where temperatures were in the 70s Fahrenheit earlier this week, to advise residents to prepare for power outages and hazardous roads that could be similar to those experienced in the wake of a Category 5 hurricane. Temperatures were expected to drop to below freezing there by Sunday night.
He said significant ice and up to 12 inches of snow were expected across parts of the southern Plains on Sunday and into today, with the most snowfall expected near the Oklahoma-Texas border.
Winter weather conditions are affecting large portions of the U.S., but it is rare for them to extend so far south, Chenard said.
The Dallas area had a covering of snow by Sunday morning, with flakes still falling, and as much as 6 inches was forecast.
Chenard said sleet and freezing rain could hit further south.
"We're looking at potentially over a quarter inch of freezing rain, and that will cause significant impact," Chenard said. "We may even see some freezing rain get as far as New Orleans by early Monday."
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, who issued a disaster declaration for all of the state's 254 counties, warned on Saturday: "All of Texas is facing an extremely dangerous winter storm."
Abbott, Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt and Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson have each activated National Guard units to assist state agencies, such as rescuing stranded drivers.
The weather was affecting operations at airports across the area, with more than 700 flights canceled at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport, and at Dallas Love Field most of the flights for Southwest Airlines, the airport's main carrier, were canceled.
American Airlines said about 345 of their flights were canceled at DFW Airport, its hub, on Sunday, The airline said the storm was also affecting their flights across the region, with operations reduced and canceled at airports across Texas, Oklahoma and Arkansas.
Meanwhile, in the Pacific Northwest, tens of thousands of people were without power after a winter storm blanketed the region with ice and snow and made travel treacherous.

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