January 22, 2013
'It's cold, it's miserable'
Mountain State shivers as Arctic front hits
Kenny Kemp
Renee Thompson of Charleston's West Side tries to keep warm Tuesday with two hats, a coat, a scarf and a pair of mittens.
Kenny Kemp
Zach Shirkey (right) of West Virginia American Water Co. works on a water main break in 15-degree temperatures Tuesday on Seventh Avenue, North Charleston. Crew leader Kevin Westfall is at left.
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- With temperatures dipping into single digits, a number of people awoke to cold-related car problems Tuesday morning, AAA officials said.

AAA offices in affected areas had almost twice the call volume as normal for a Tuesday morning, said Christina Rollyson, district office supervisor for the Charleston-area AAA.

The low temperatures caused locks to freeze but the biggest problem was the stress the cold put on car batteries, Rollyson said.

"The number-one call we get, really, is battery," she said. "If their battery was already needing to be replaced, this will do it."

Rollyson said drivers should be prepared in case they're stuck in their vehicle during extreme cold weather. Jumper cables, flares, extra blankets, clothes and walking shoes should be kept in vehicles in case of an emergency, she said.

Cold, dry air from the Arctic caused temperatures to hit 11 degrees late Monday and into Tuesday morning, said Andy Roche, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Charleston. With the wind chill, the temperature felt more like 3 below zero, he said.

Tuesday's high was 21 degrees and meteorologists expected the low Tuesday night to be around 9.

These bursts of extreme cold usually happen once or twice each winter, Roche said.

"The last few years, it has been delayed a little bit," Roche said. "We're already to the end of January almost, and this is the first shot we have from the Arctic."

Temperatures are expected to rise over the next few days, but warm is relative, Roche said.

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