Many photos of the ice and resulting damage from the ice storms that targeted the Tri-State region were captured in the comments to the following Facebook post. At the peak of the storm, 51% of Lawrence County and 16% of Gallia County was without power, according to. Lawrence and Gallia Counties were hard hit by the repeating winter storms.Hardest hit areas were as follows with percentages of customers out of power at the height of the storm indicated: According to, at one point on February 16, 100,000 customers were without power in West Virginia, or roughly 10% of the state's customers.An estimated 550 broken power poles needed to be replaced and roughly 2,400 spans of wire needed to be put back up. According to Appalachian Power, the weight of the snow and ice caused trees to collapse onto wires and transmission towers to buckle.Two deaths in Boyd County were attributed to hypothermia due to loss of power. Up to six inches of snow even blanketed portions of the Florida Panhandle.Percentages of customers out of power per county at height of storm: According to, at one point on February 16, 40,000 customers, or 65% of total customers served in Boyd, Carter, Lawrence and Greenup Counties in Kentucky were without power.The "unprecedented" magnitude of the damage required total reconstruction of destroyed circuits. According to Kentucky Power, extensive damage to circuits occurred in Boyd, Carter and Lawrence Counties.The hardest hit counties were Boyd, Carter and Lawrence in Kentucky, Lawrence County, Ohio, and Wayne, Cabell, Putnam and Lincoln Counties in West Virginia. Public Information Statement containing snow and ice reports, issued 116 pm Friday February 19, 2021.Public Information Statement containing snow and ice reports, issued 1036 pm Tuesday February 16, 2021.Public Information Statement containing snow and ice reports, issued 1104 pm Thursday February 11, 2021.Many of the reports used to create these maps were provided by volunteer weather spotters, Cooperative Weather Observers and CoCoRaHS observers and we thank them for their diligence and reports! Maps of interpolated observed snowfall (courtesy of the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center) along with freezing rain reports for each of these three storms is included below. Another winter storm impacted the region with snow and freezing rain on February 17th through the 18th, hindering the efforts to restore power across the Tri-State region and causing hazardous travel conditions across much of the region. Back to back ice storms affected our region February 10th and 11th and then again February 15th and 16th, leading to widespread tree damage and extensive power outages across the Tri-State region of Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia.
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