The finger-pointing began almost immediately -- and with good reason.
A mere few inches of snow had shut down Atlanta, forcing school kids to spend the night at schools, stranding drivers on interstates and making the city a laughing stock.
As thousands of Atlanta commuters sat motionless on interstates Tuesday night into Wednesday, Georgia's governor said the path of the storm caught officials off guard.
"We have been confronted with an unexpected storm that has hit the metropolitan Atlanta area," Georgia Governor Nathan Deal told reporters.
CNN meteorologist Chad Myers said Atlanta had plenty of warning. The National Weather Service put the entire Atlanta metro area under a winter storm warning at 3:38 a.m. Tuesday morning. The agency warned of 1 to 2 inches of snow accumulation and said it would begin "as early as mid-morning."
Why did this happen? Who's to blame?
Governor Deal put much of the blame on the fact that everyone tried to go home at the same time, gridlocking highways for hours.
But the problem highlights how Atlanta and cities like it depend so exclusively on cars. While Atlanta has a commuter train system, it doesn't serve the metro area.
The city has a population of 1 million; the metro area, a population of 6 million.
And when offices and schools let out Tuesday, the masses got in their cars to head to the suburbs. An expansive public transportation system would have undoubtedly alleviated the ensuing traffic stress.
This week's debacle is also disturbing because if another catastrophe were to hit and roads were the only path out, Atlanta would be in the same situation again.
It was a common refrain from drivers who sat more than 10 hours on Atlanta roads: Where are the salting trucks? It's actually the state that's responsible for maintaining interstates -- where much of the gridlock occurred.
Ashley McCants half a day in her car before she gave up, got out and carried her son 2 miles to a stranger's house, where she could stay the night.
During those 12 hours, she didn't see a single salting truck or snow plow.
The Georgia Department of Transportation commissioner said crews had been deployed farther south, but then scrambled closer to Atlanta as the storm got under way.
But clearly the efforts weren't enough. "It was disheartening," McCants said. "I felt like everyone knew this was coming."
Said Gov. Deal, "We all have some lessons we need to learn here from this.
http://www.cnn.com/2014/01/30/us/atlanta-ice-how-it-happened/?sr=google_news&google_editors_picks=true