Numbing cold taking toll in South; more frigid nights ahead

A pedestrian makes his way up Cumberland Ave. towards the University of Tennessee following overnight snows on Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2015, in Knoxville.
A pedestrian makes his way up Cumberland Ave. towards the University of Tennessee following overnight snows on Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2015, in Knoxville.

ATLANTA (AP) - A prolonged stretch of brutal cold is taking a toll in the South, sending people in Atlanta to the emergency room seeking treatment for hypothermia and existing ailments made worse by the frigid weather.

The temperature in Atlanta fell below freezing at 8 p.m. New Year's Eve and remained there for the next 40 hours. As dawn broke Tuesday, it was 13 degrees in the city.

"We have a group of patients who are coming in off the street who are looking to escape the cold - we have dozens and dozens of those every day," said Dr. Brooks Moore, associate medical director in the emergency department of Grady Health System, which operates Georgia's largest hospital.

About once a day or every other day, emergency room doctors at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta must raise someone's body temperature with warming blankets, warm fluids or other measures, Moore said. About 10 to 20 people with existing health ailments show up each day at Grady's ER because the bitterly cold temperatures have exacerbated their conditions, he said.

Temperatures in Atlanta are expected to dive well below freezing every night this week through Saturday night, the National Weather Service said Tuesday.

Below-freezing temperatures have been common this week across the Deep South, even reaching New Orleans where it was 26 degrees before dawn Tuesday. The New Orleans area may see snow flurries Tuesday night into Wednesday morning, forecasters said.

In Mississippi, a low of 15 degrees early Tuesday tied the record for the date, which was set in 1979.

In Alabama, overnight lows dropped to 8 degrees near Cullman and 20 degrees in Mobile.

Georgia saw one of its coldest temperatures of the winter: 2 degrees shortly before dawn Tuesday at a U.S. Forest Service weather station at Toccoa.

Along the Georgia coast, the National Weather Service on Tuesday issued a winter storm watch as a low-pressure system in the Atlantic Ocean could bring ice and freezing rain to the area late Tuesday night and Wednesday.

Temperatures in Savannah hovered at 30 degrees at noon Tuesday, cold enough for icicles to dangle from the ornate wrought-iron fountain in Forsyth Park at the edge of the city's downtown historic district.

The National Weather Service says Savannah could see up to 2 inches of snow and sleet Wednesday. Savannah hasn't seen any measureable snowfall since Feb. 12, 2010, when 0.9 inches (2.3 centimeters) fell.

It rarely gets cold enough for snow to stick in Savannah, considering the average high temperatures in January is 60 degrees.

"I've never seen icicles in Savannah, period," said Sean Dempsey, a local restaurant manager who wore a hat, gloves and a thick coat to walk his dogs Tuesday in Forsyth Park. "I'm pretty sure last year at New Year's, lots of families were in the park playing catch, Frisbee football and stuff like that."

Dempsey said he expects his restaurant will still open Tuesday, though he predicted many Savannah businesses will close.

"Basically, this town will kind of shut down," Dempsey said.

Upcoming Events