NASHVILLE — Frustrations were bubbling up Friday for the tens of thousands who have been without power for nearly a week in the U.S. South as a new storm looms, including Tennessee's residents in Nashville, where the utility was criticized for storm preparations and recovery.
Terry Miles, a 59-year-old construction worker whose home has been without power since Sunday, said he's using a fish fryer for heat and is worried about carbon monoxide.
''I'm taking a chance of killing myself and killing my wife, because why?'' Miles said after attending a Nashville Electric Service news conference intended to showcase the utility's repairs on poles and lines. He then pointed to officials.
''I came up here to speak my mind because I've been so cold," he said. "This is the coldest and worst I've ever been in my damn life.''
Crews have been working by ground and air to restore the lingering outages as another storm is predicted to hit the East Coast, threatening near-hurricane force winds, heavy snow and flooding, while arctic air moves into the Southeast.
More than 186,000 homes and businesses were without electricity Friday, with the vast majority of those outages in Mississippi and Tennessee, according to the outage tracking website poweroutage.us.
Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee said he has shared ''strong concerns'' with Nashville Electric Service leadership, saying communication and power restoration must improve.
Residents ''need a clear timeline for power restoration, transparency on the number of linemen deployed, and a better understanding of when work will be completed in their neighborhood,'' Lee said.