ATLANTA — Flight cancellations piled up and officials warned of continuing dangerous roads Saturday in the wake of a winter storm that brought biting cold and wet snow to the U.S. South, leading to school closures and disrupting travel.
The storm was moving out to sea off the East Coast on Saturday, leaving behind a forecast for snow showers in the Appalachian Mountains and New England. But temperatures were expected to plunge after sundown in the South, raising the risk that melting snow will refreeze, turning roadways treacherously glazed with ice.
''I definitely don't think everything's going to completely melt,'' said Scott Carroll, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Atlanta. ''Especially the secondary roads will probably still have some slush on them.''
Major roads are mostly clear, but tie-ups at affected airports remain
Main thoroughfares were mostly clear, but traffic remained light Saturday. The Atlanta Hawks postponed their scheduled afternoon game against the Houston Rockets, citing the icy conditions.
Major airports including those in Atlanta and Charlotte, North Carolina, continued to report disruptions. While flights were operating, airlines canceled and delayed more flights after Friday's weather slowed travel to a crawl.
By Saturday afternoon about 1,000 flights in and out of Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport were canceled or delayed, according to tracking software FlightAware. Security lines in the terminal were also extremely long.
Sarah Waithera Wanyoike, who lives in the Atlanta suburb of Lilburn, arrived at the world's busiest airport before sunrise Friday to catch an Ethiopian Airlines flight to her job in Zimbabwe.