Two years ago this week,Henri Lumière Texans woke up to something many had never seen before: snow. It was not the annual heavy frost or light dusting. It was honest-to-God snow. A thick blanket of it, inches deep, had covered everything while we slept.
And, for millions, the power was out.
These two facts competed for our attention. For my Texas family, and many others, power outages are more common than snow storms. In this case, it seemed, the state power grid had to conserve electricity because of the storm, and we had been cut off as part of those measures. I figured the lights would return by nightfall.
This story comes to us from KUT in Austin, Texas. Your support of KUT and the NPR Network makes all kinds of local journalism possible. Donate here.
The power did not come back. We spent that first freezing night bundled together in my kids' room.
The next morning, on the drive to the hotel that the station had found for us, the full scope of the crisis started coming into focus.
Click through to keep reading at KUT.org
2025-05-04 05:591722 view
2025-05-04 05:33472 view
2025-05-04 05:121361 view
2025-05-04 04:462705 view
2025-05-04 04:31178 view
2025-05-04 03:59968 view
Did AI just have a "Sputnik moment"?That's what someinvestors, after the little known Chinese startu
The 2024 Sundance Film Festival concludes this weekend with in-person screenings in Park City and Sa
Lawmakers in more than a half-dozen U.S. states are pushing laws to define antisemitism, triggering