FACT CHECK: Did Electric Cars Recently Break Down On Snow-Covered German Road?
The photo dates back to 2011
Two welders, who were among hundreds of drivers stranded in standstill traffic on Interstate 95 in Virginia after Monday's snowstorm, took matters into their own hands to help strangers and escape their nightmarish situation.
Safwan Aziz and John Hildenbrand were traveling from New York to South Carolina for work when snowfall caused a massive traffic jam between Ruther Glen in Caroline County and Dumfries in Prince William County on Monday. Multiple disabled vehicles and mounting ice and snow trapped people in their cars, many without food or water and with dwindling fuel.
For Aziz and Hildenbrand, whose story was told by the Washington Post, the problem was a pair of "massive trees" that had fallen on the highway shoulder, preventing them from driving their truck just a quarter-mile to exit 140 and Route 1, which was still open.
The two men had left New York early Monday morning, according to the Post. They reached I-95 at around 10 a.m. Monday, and by the early afternoon, traffic began to slow down. They moved forward in intermittent 50-foot bursts as snow and slush piled up around them.
The men said they saw other people shut their cars off and suffer the cold in order to conserve gas. Some people left their vehicles abandoned on the highway. By 8 p.m. Monday night, traffic had reached an excruciating halt. They were forced to spend the night in their truck, without much sleep. With each other for company, they chain-smoked cigarettes, listened to the radio for updates, and passed the time watching the flashing lights of other vehicles in distress.
The next morning, Aziz and Hildenbrand used the generator on their welding truck to brew three pots of coffee. Aziz, who told the Post he never leaves home "without my boots laced up" — meaning he always leaves home prepared — had packed Cliff bars, party mix, 32 water bottles, and his mother-in-law's mother's pecan pistachio bread. They shared the coffee, water, and food with other stranded drivers, walking from car to car and knocking on windows to provide a helping hand.
“We’re a bit rough around the edges. We’re welders. We don’t look like the type of people to necessarily be asking to help you out,” Hildenbrand told the Post. “Some people didn’t roll their windows down, but others saw through that.”
One man had several cans of Pepsi in his car. He cut the tops off to create makeshift mugs, filled them with the welders' coffee, and began handing them out to other travelers.
“Before you know it, there were six to eight of us standing around the work truck,” Aziz said. “All of us basically admitting that it was this — right here — that had lifted our spirits in just a really” bad situation, he said, using an expletive.
But by 8 a.m on Tuesday morning, the welders decided they had waited on that maddening highway long enough. Those trees, each probably weighing hundreds of pounds after being layered with ice and snow, were the only obstacle standing in the way of their freedom. And they had to go.
“It was kind of like a survival mode,” Hildenbrand said. “We just felt: ‘I need to get off this highway.’"
“I just wanted,” Aziz said, “to get the hell away from that road.”
So with great effort, the two men managed to shove those trees far enough apart that their sturdy four-wheel-drive truck could pass through. They drove over at least a foot of snow and ice to escape on exit 140, leaving a path that was too difficult for most drivers to follow.
As they took the exit, Aziz told the Post he saw a man sitting in a Virginia Department of Transportation truck.
“He was just sitting there in his car all warm and cozy, didn’t look like he had a care or concern about all the miles of traffic he was looking at,” Aziz said.
“In my opinion, VDOT should have loaded that truck with food and water and that man should have driven along handing out food and water to people that needed it,” Hildenbrand said. “It shouldn’t have been a couple of welders from New York. The state of Virginia should have pulled its pants up, got out there and done more for the people of Virginia.”
After making it to Route 1, the welders continued on, driving slowly through the snow for about an hour and a half. Then the road cleared up, and they were able to reach a glorious 70 miles per hour. The men arrived at their destination in South Carolina just before 4 p.m. Tuesday, a full 36 hours after they'd left New York.
At their hotel, they cracked open some beers and ordered a cheesesteak pizza to celebrate being off the road.
“It’s a good thing John and I are such good friends, because it should be illegal to have to spend 36 hours” trapped in a car with another man, Aziz said. “A good-looking woman? Maybe. But a man? No way.”
VDOT said Wednesday that I-95 in the Fredericksburg area was open, although some icy conditions have persisted. At a press conference, Gov. Ralph Northam (D) called the ordeal "an incredibly unusual event." Transportation officials said rainfall before the weather turned to snow would have washed away any treatment on roadways to prevent icing, USA Today reported.
A substantial 50-mile backup on I-95 in Virginia left drivers stranded overnight in 16-degree temperatures.
Pat Gray discussed the story on Tuesday's episode of Pat Gray Unleashed. Snow blanketed parts of Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, and Kentucky. According to Alena Yarmosky, spokesperson for Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, police responded to more than 1,000 stranded motorists.
Pat reminded listeners to keep blankets and extra food and water in their cars in case an emergency like what happened in Virginia happens to them.
Later on Tuesday's episode, Pat covered the insane position a law professor has taken on the First and Second Amendments. According to law professor Mary Anne Franks, major edits should be made to the first two amendments to benefit those who are pro-abortion as well as the LGBTQ community.
Watch the clip for more details. Can't watch? Download the podcast here.
To enjoy more of Pat's biting analysis and signature wit as he restores common sense to a senseless world, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution and live the American dream.
The Northeast is currently in the middle of a massive snowstorm — snow was predicted to accumulate at up to 4 inches per hour in New York City.
Clearly, it is too treacherous for average citizens to be out and about.
That's the message from the governor, anyway.
New York Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo told his subjects that everyone should "stay home and off the roads" Monday as the blizzard hit the region.
That is, course, unless your name is Andrew Cuomo.
Cuomo declared a state of emergency Monday morning as New York was set to get pounded with snow.
"When snow is falling that quickly, it makes it very difficult for plows to keep up with it. I want New Yorkers to hear me loud and clear — stay home and off the road," the governor said in a news release announcing the state of emergency declaration, adding, "and if you must travel, get where you're going before noon, and expect to remain home for some time."
He then jumped in his car — alone — and drove himself from Albany to New York City, a nearly three-hour drive, the New York Post reported. He reportedly wanted to show solidarity with snowplow crews and other government employees who were being told by the state that "they needed to be on the job."
In a news conference in Manhattan following his trek to Gotham, Cuomo called the conditions "seriously dangerous" and said, "There is no reason to be out on the roads."
Cuomo even admitted during a radio interview while driving that the road conditions were "horrendous" as he violated his own advice to the people of the Empire State.
"I'm telling you, I'm on the road right now — it is horrendous," Cuomo told WCBS-AM while driving to Manhattan, the Post said.
"I am personally driving into New York City," he told the station, noting that he was driving himself because of COVID-19 precautions.
The WCBS interviewer asked him if it was a good idea to be driving considering the warning he had just given.
The governor answered, "Life is options."
"I want to be out there," Cuomo told WCBS, the Post said. "We have a lot of emergency workers that are doing great work today, and my personal predilection is I don't like to call emergency workers out and tell the snowplow drivers, 'You have to be out,' and the police, 'You have to be out,' and the emergency utility workers, 'You have to be out,' but then I stay home."
"If I call them out, I'm not calling anyone into a situation that I wouldn't go into myself," he said.
Cuomo did not explain the level of emergency training he has received or the hours of experience he has had as a snowplow driver.