Four days after a powerful storm cut a path? from the Midwest to the Mid-Atlantic, nearly 2 million people remain without electricity as triple-digit temperatures continue to scorch the region. NBC's Tom Costello reports.
By msnbc.com staff and NBC News
With power, and air conditioning, still out in nearly 1.5 million homes and businesses -- and many of those not likely to be reconnected for days -- the National Weather Service warned that dangerously high temperatures would hit the Midwest on Tuesday and then spread into the eastern third of the U.S. over the next few days.
The NWS issued excessive heat warnings for parts of Minnesota, Wisconsin, Indiana, Ohio, Illinois, Missouri and Kentucky.?It also issued warnings about severe thunderstorms in parts of Michigan and South Dakota early Tuesday.
"Combined with high levels of humidity, this will create dangerous heat index values as high as 100-110 degrees for locations such as Minneapolis, Chicago, Kansas City and St. Louis," the weather service reported.
That heat will expand "eastward over the next few days," it added. "Much of the eastern third of the country will see a resurgence of the heat experienced last weekend."
On Monday, the power outages were reduced by about a million customers following a strong weekend storm that cut a path from the Midwest to the mid-Atlantic, knocking down trees and power lines.
But residents and businesses were still struggling with outages in Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, Washington, D.C., and West Virginia.?
In Washington, D.C., where blackouts are a frequent problem in the summer months, Mayor Vincent Gray urged President Barack Obama to declare a state of emergency.
"I think people are fed up with power outages, and we need a game-changer," Gray said. "We need an approach now that's going to stop how we stop this in the first place."?
In Chicago on Monday, more than 250,000 Chicago-area customers were knocked offline by Sunday's storms; that number was reduced to 48,000 by Tuesday morning, NBCChicago.com reported.
In Ohio, some 300,000 customers remain without power.
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As nearly 1.5 million people across the country woke up Tuesday to another day with no power, the National Weather Service warned dangerously high temperatures would be persisting through the end of the week in some states.
Much of the devastation to the power grid was blamed on last weekend's rare "super derecho," a storm packing hurricane-force winds across a 700-mile stretch from the Midwest to the Atlantic Ocean.
The derecho moved quickly across the region with little warning. The straight-line winds were just as destructive as any hurricane ? but when a tropical system strikes, officials usually have several days to get extra personnel in place.
So utility companies had to wait days for extra crews traveling from as far away as Quebec and Oklahoma. And workers found that the toppled trees and power lines often entangled broken equipment in debris that had to be removed before workers could even get started.?
The largest U.S. home and auto insurer, State Farm, said it had received about 29,000 claims from last weekend's storms, more than three-quarters of them for house damage.?
USAA and Nationwide said they had received more than 12,000 claims in total from the weekend storms. Most were for home damage.?
Officials feared the death toll, already at 23, could climb because of the heat and widespread use of generators, which emit fumes that can be dangerous in enclosed spaces.
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The Weather Channel?s website, weather.com, said the worst heat on July 4 would be located over the central states, with parts of the Midwest seeing highs about 5 to 15 degrees above average.
?The sultry conditions will also extend eastward into the Mid-Atlantic, including Washington, D.C., and Philadelphia, Pa.,? wrote weather.com meteorologist Chris Dolce.
Dolce warned that a cold front would bring scattered storms to the Northeast on July 4, saying ?a few of these storms could be severe with damaging winds and hail.?
?Parts of the Southeast may deal with pop-up afternoon and evening thunderstorms, particularly in the southern Appalachians and south Florida,? he added.
Cooling centers for residents who don't have air conditioning have opened up across the country. In Virginia, in response to the number of cooling shelters in the area that don't allow animals,?a gourmet pet bakery opened up a cooling center just for pets,?wamu.org reported.?
In Wheaton, Ill., a suburb of Chicago, July 4 fireworks and a parade were canceled due to damage from Sunday's thunderstorms.
"I don't think there's a block of houses that doesn't have half a dozen trees down, or parts of trees. It's a real mess to get around," resident Donald Sender told NBCChicago.com?as he refueled his generator.
Temperatures in the Chicago area are expected to reach 95 to 100 degrees on Tuesday, with heat index readings of 100 to 110 degrees, according to NBCChicago.com.
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