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Storm Izzy batters US as 260,000 are left without power, 3,000 flights are canceled, and 5 states declare emergencies

AS Storm Izzy makes its way across the US, 260,000 have been left without power, 3,000 flights were canceled, and five states have declared states of emergency.

The storm will end up affecting huge portions of the country as it hits the Northeast on Sunday after battering the South with snow, ice, and wind.

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The Weather Channel
The storm will continue making its way across the US[/caption]
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A truck hangs from a Durham, North Carolina, overpass after its cab apparently slid off the highway during winter weather
Durham Police Department via AP
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Winter storm Izzy wreaks havoc in Charlotte, North Carolina
Getty Images - Getty

So far, governors in Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia have all declared states of emergency as they attempt to deal with the massive storm.

Up to 12 inches of snow had already fallen in parts of western North Carolina as of Sunday morning.

In the Greenville-Spartanburg, South Carolina, area, four to six inches were reported early Sunday, with snow continuing to fall at around one inch per hour.

The Weather Channel reports that this is the area’s heaviest snowfall in eight years.

In the areas that have already been smacked by the storm, more than 260,000 power outages have already been reported, according to PowerOutage.us.

North and South Carolina, Georgia, and Virginia have the most outages in the US as of 8.55p.

There are have more than 43,000 and 42,000 outages reported in North Carolina and South Carolina, respectively, more than 30,000 outages in Georgia and nearly 23,000 in Virginia.

Airlines are also seeing major effects of the storm, with just over 3,000 flights in the US canceled due to the weekend weather.

As of around 8.30pm on Sunday, FlightAware reported that 3,007 flights within, into, or out of the US had been canceled, and nearly 5,000 have been canceled in total.

In addition to the heavy snow, sleet and rain are also a concern in certain parts of the South.

Some sleet was reported in eastern North Carolina and just inland from Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, according to The Weather Channel. The Atlanta metro area was also reportedly logging some freezing rain.

The conditions are making travel a nightmare for much of the eastern US, hence the states of emergency declared in the Southeast.

IZZY’S SUNDAY PATH

Snow is expected to continue in parts of Mississippi and Alabama into Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky, West Virginia, and across the Appalachian peaks on Sunday.

On Sunday night, snow that could be mixed with freezing rain is expected to spread up through mid-Atlantic states and into the rest of the Northeast.

The wintry mix is expected to switch over to rain into Sunday night when it begins to fall along the I-95 corridor in Washington, DC, Philadelphia, and New York City.

On Monday, parts of Ohio, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, New York, and up to New England may experience heavy, wind-driven snow.

Areas closer to the coast will likely see more rain, though it could change back to snow briefly before the storm fully moves out.

Much of the Northeast, particularly New England, could also get strong winds with the potential for wind damage.

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Reuters
People in Iowa dig out after Izzy passed through[/caption]
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Reuters
Kids get in some sledding time after Izzy passed through Iowa[/caption]
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The Weather Channel
Five states declared a state of emergency[/caption]

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