Officials Warn Citizens to Plan for Snow, Colder Temperatures

HARRISBURG – State health and emergency management officials are urging the public to pay attention to forecasts calling for snowfall across much of Pennsylvania Thursday night and Friday morning, followed by sharply colder temperatures over the weekend.

“Anyone who plans to travel should be sure to check road conditions before heading out, and allow plenty of time to reach their destination,” said Glenn Cannon, director of the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency. “In addition, motorists should have a small emergency kit of food, water, warm clothing and any specialized items like medication or baby supplies loaded in their car before leaving work or home.”

Forecasts predict the bulk of the snow will fall Thursday evening and overnight before the storm system exits the northeast part of the state Friday morning. The coldest temperatures and wind chills of the season are expected over the weekend, with high temperatures in the single digits and below-zero wind chills.

During periods of extreme cold, the Department of Health recommends that you:

 

Hypothermia can also occur indoors if your thermostat is set too low, or there is a power outage or heating system failure. If symptoms of hypothermia are detected, warm the victim up immediately and get medical help as soon as possible. To help reduce the risk of hypothermia, follow these recommendations:

 

Motorists can check road conditions on more than 2,900 miles of state roads by calling 511 or visiting www.511PA.com. 511PA, which is free and available 24 hours a day, provides traffic delay warnings, weather forecasts, average traffic speeds on urban interstates and access to more than 500 traffic cameras. The 511 site also provides easy-to-use, color-coded winter road conditions for all interstates and other routes covered in the 511 reporting network. Regional Twitter alerts are also available on the 511PA website.

Never call 911 to request or report road conditions. When calling 911 to report an emergency, it is critical for callers to stay on the line, even if for an extended series of rings, until the operator answers. Hang-ups due to frustration result in wasted staff time as the 911 center tries to reestablish contact.

The commonwealth’s ReadyPA campaign encourages citizens to take three basic steps before an emergency occurs: Be Informed, Be Prepared, Be Involved.  More detailed information, including downloadable emergency kit checklists and emergency plan templates, is available online at www.ReadyPA.org or by calling 1-888-9-READY-PA.

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