
A snow plow makes its way along a clean Ridge Road in front of Our Lady Of Victory Basilica on Dec. 27, 2022, in Lackawanna, New York. - John Normile/Getty Images North America/TNS
When, in February 2021, the temperatures in parts of Texas dropped to the low teens, crashing the power infrastructure, officials were at a loss dealing with a problem that they simply hadn’t had before and people died as a result. The same was true later that year in the Pacific Northwest as temperatures hit 115 degrees, baking Oregon and Washington to the point that cables literally melted and roads buckled in a region where most homes don’t have A/C and people died as a result. The same cannot be said for officials responsible for the safety of typically snowbound western New York, which wa...