Back-to-back winter storms, fueled by cold arctic air and wind speeds that reached over 50 miles per hour near the Columbia River Gorge, blanketed the Portland-Vancouver metro area in snow and ice this week, causing power outages; downed tree limbs; stranded motorists; and a wind-driven residential fire that damaged a home on Southeast Blair Road, north of Camas-Washougal.
The first storm arrived late in the morning, Saturday, Jan. 13, and stalled over the Portland-Vancouver metro area for several hours, dropping 1 to 3 inches of snow, causing thousands to lose power.
Another storm that hit late Tuesday evening, Jan. 16, brought more high-speed wind, cold and ice to the Portland-Vancouver metro area, and caused another round of power outages and dangerous travel — shutting down Highway 14 through much of the Columbia River Gorge, from milepost 19 east of Washougal to milepost 65 near White Salmon, Washington.
The storms also contributed to at least nine deaths in the greater Portland metro area due to fallen tree limbs, hypothermia and a fire inside a Northeast Portland church that may have been caused by a generator being used during a power outage that accompanied frigid temperatures. On Wednesday, Jan. 17, two adults and a teenager died by electrocution and an infant was injured in Northeast Portland after coming in contact with a power line brought down by a falling, ice-laden tree limb.
Bryan Rachal, the city of Camas’ communications director, said Camas had “a number of closed roads” after the first storm hit Satuday, and that there were “numerous trees down and a lot of burst pipes.”