
Thomas B. Langhorne
Articles
-
2 months ago |
yahoo.com | Ryan Reynolds |Houston Harwood |Sarah Loesch |Jon Webb |Thomas B. Langhorne
Yet another winter storm is expected to sweep through the Tri-State on Tuesday, bringing with it several inches of snowfall and dropping temperatures to even colder levels in its wake. We'll have updates here throughout the day and evening. 7:45 p.m.: School closings starting to come inAs snow starts to pick up Tuesday evening in the Tri-State, some school districts are starting to announce closures and delays for Wednesday morning. You can find a list of closures by clicking here.
-
Jan 7, 2025 |
news.yahoo.com | Ryan Reynolds |Sarah Loesch |Houston Harwood |Jon Webb |Thomas B. Langhorne
Thousands in the Evansville area remain without power following the winter storm on Sunday and Monday. That's led to dangerous situations, including downed power lines. One local resident posted a video from her neighbor on social media showing a power line igniting after a tree branch fell during the storm, according to a WFIE report. WFIE reported that no one was injured from the fire. More than 60,000 Southern Indiana customers lost service at the outages' peak.
-
Jan 7, 2025 |
yahoo.com | Ryan Reynolds |Sarah Loesch |Houston Harwood |Jon Webb |Thomas B. Langhorne
Thousands in the Evansville area are without power following the winter storm on Sunday and Monday. That's led to dangerous situations, including downed power lines. One local resident posted a video from her neighbor on social media showing a power line igniting after a tree branch fell during the storm, according to a WFIE report. WFIE reported that no one was injured from the fire. More than 60,000 Southern Indiana customers lost service at the outages' peak.
-
Jan 7, 2025 |
indystar.com | Ryan Reynolds |Sarah Loesch |Houston Harwood |Jon Webb |Thomas B. Langhorne
Thousands in the Evansville area are without power following the winter storm on Sunday and Monday. That's led to dangerous situations, including downed power lines. One local resident posted a video from her neighbor on social media showing a power line igniting after a tree branch fell during the storm, according to a WFIE report. WFIE reported that no one was injured from the fire. More than 60,000 Southern Indiana customers lost service at the outages' peak.
-
Jan 7, 2025 |
thegleaner.com | Thomas B. Langhorne
EVANSVILLE — So your tree fell on your neighbor's house, or his tree fell on yours. You stockpiled your refrigerator with food in anticipation of a winter storm — and lost it all when the power went out. Sometimes homeowner's insurance will cover you, a veteran agent said Monday. Sometimes it won't. Sometimes — if you've got the stomach for it — you can fight. Start with what the insurance biz calls an "act of God" — an event beyond human control, that can't be prevented.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →