Another cross-country winter storm will develop this week on the heels of a system that caused havoc across much of the nation in recent days, leading to 13 deaths in the South and Northeast. 

Snow will continue in California and other parts of the West as well as the Great Lakes areaon Monday, and some areas will see temperatures dip below freezing once again.

Fears of flooding in California also were on the rise Monday as forecasters warned that a warm rainstorm could hit portions of the state later in the week. 

More than 200,000 homes and businesses remained in the dark nationwide as of Monday from storms over the past several days, according to tracking website Poweroutage.us. Kentucky had 118,000 outages, Michigan 26,000, Tennessee 19,000 and California 18,000. And the outages have dragged on – Kentucky’s storm hit Friday. Michigan has been battling outages since an ice storm struck two weeks ago.

Developments:

►Minneapolis could see several inches of accumulating snow Thursday and Friday. Residents woke up to slick roads Monday from a storm Sunday night.

►Snow was expected to persist across northern Michigan for most of the day Monday before rolling into the interior Northeast later Monday into Tuesday morning.

HIKERS RESCUED:Death toll rises to 13; teenager hikers rescued in Southern California

5 dead in storms across Kentucky, but ‘miracle’ in one town

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said 125,000 homes and businesses remained without power Monday, three days after a wall of tornadoes, thunderstorms and heavy winds swept across the state, killing five people. About 300 were without water, he said.

Beshear said he was encouraged by his visit to Fremont a day earlier.

“What happened in Fremont was a miracle,” he said. “An EF2 tornado landed, went basically down their main street a mile and half, (and) no one got hurt in this town.”

He said cleanup was in full force. Local officials and utility workers worked side-by-side with residents and volunteers.