Moses Lake woman stranded in Texas gets help from strangers
CHERYL SCHWEIZER | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 5 years, 1 month AGO
Senior Reporter Cheryl Schweizer is a journalist with more than 30 years of experience serving small communities in the Pacific Northwest. She began her post-high-school education at Treasure Valley Community College and enerned her journalism degree at Oregon State University. After working for multiple publications, she has settled down at the Columbia Basin Herald and has been a staple of the newsroom for more than a decade. Schweizer’s dedication to her communities and profession has earned her the nickname “The Baroness of Bylines.” She covers a variety of beats including health, business and various municipalities. | February 23, 2021 1:00 AM
MOSES LAKE — Amy Dana, of Moses Lake, traveled to San Antonio as the makeup artist for her friend Anna Hiatt, of Arlington, Washington, competing in the United States of America’s Mrs. 2021 pageant President’s Day weekend. But, what was supposed to be a fun trip to a nice warm place turned into a stressful and scary couple of days in the aftermath of a snowstorm.
Dana said it also was an example of friends connecting and some stranded travelers helped by strangers.
“I got stuck in the ‘snowmageddon’ of San Antonio,” Dana said Sunday from Florida, where she is visiting family.
The Feb. 14 storm covered most of the central United States and extended into south Texas including San Antonio. The region was hit with cold, freezing rain and what Dana estimated was four inches of snow.
The storm hit just as the pageant finals were ending, Dana said.
“The snow just blew right in,” she said.
When morning came, San Antonio was shut down. Hiatt was headed back to Washington, and Dana was going on to Florida. Those flights were canceled. They had not planned for winter weather and hadn’t really packed clothes for it.
Then it became clear the hotel was running out of food. They bundled up in the warmest clothes they could find and searched for an open grocery store. They found one, but its shelves were mostly bare.
“There was cereal, but there was no milk,” Dana said.
She found a can of chili, some protein drinks and a few other edibles, which she and Hiatt shared with two friends from the pageant.
Hotel officials then announced over the intercom water was being shut off.
“That’s when we started scrambling,” Dana said.
They filled wastebaskets and bottles with whatever water was left in the hotel. Being from the Pacific Northwest, they knew how to camp and how to make it work, Dana said.
But it was a challenging situation.
“Just really stressful and scary,” she said.
She had already contacted her friends back home in Moses Lake, to see if they had connections in Texas who might be able to help find supplies, since air travel was shut down.
Her friend Jodi Truman contacted her sister, Angie Correa, who lives in San Antonio. Correa “went above and beyond,” Dana said.
Correa offered the four women a place to stay, a house next door to the Correa residence the family is selling.
“These people gave us shelter, they gave us food,” Dana said.
Most of Texas experienced rolling blackouts, including every neighborhood in the immediate vicinity of the house they were staying in – except their neighborhood, Dana said. They lost water for one day.
They even got a chance to go sightseeing as the weather eased. Dana said she was impressed by the sight of the Alamo covered in ice and snow.
The snow melted, but a second storm dropped what Dana estimated was another four inches, which canceled Hiatt’s second flight. Dana managed to leave Friday, but Hiatt had to wait until Saturday.
Dana said she was thankful to have such a warm and welcoming host family.
“We were really well taken care of, and it shows true Southern hospitality,” she said.
ARTICLES BY CHERYL SCHWEIZER
Road closures, roundabout, mean construction season underway
EPHRATA — The grass is starting to turn green, the trees are starting to leaf out, construction crews are starting to build roundabouts – hey, it’s spring. At least one roundabout project is in its final phase, held over from fall 2025. The intersection of State Route 282 and Nat Washington Way will be closed the week of April 6 to allow crews to install permanent lights. “This really is the final (closure),” wrote Grant County Administrator Tom Gaines in a media release. “The roundabout will close at 6 a.m. Monday, and we plan to reopen by Friday, possibly sooner if the work finishes early.”
Ybarra announces run for Washington Senate
QUINCY — State Representative Alex Ybarra, R-Quincy, has announced his candidacy for the Washington Senate. If he’s elected, he would replace Judy Warnick, R-Moses Lake, who announced her retirement in March.
Othello Community Museum to open April 25
OTHELLO — With a couple of new exhibits, a new heating-cooling system, rearranged displays and a thorough cleaning, the Othello Community Museum will open for the summer April 25. The goal, said Molly Popchock, museum board secretary, is to operate for a full season.