I can relate.
When we lived in Colorado, we were in a hilly area with a creek running through our property. The creek crossed a county road near our gate and the beginning of our .2 mile long driveway. The wind collected snow at the low point of the road, where it and the creek and our driveway converged. Usually, our worst snows closed off our driveway for a few hours or maybe a day once in a while. The county used graders to plow snow in our area, and that was always good enough to keep the road passable.
But one storm dumped so much snow on us that the road was buried and we figured we were snowed in for a couple of days. Late the first day of the storm, the county sent a grader out. It got stuck right at the end of our driveway. A segment of the road about 1/4 mile long was too deep in snow for the grader. The second day, it was still there and the road was still closed. Bright and early the third day, county crews were there with another grader and a huge snow blower they borrowed from the airport. They channeled a two-lane trench through the snow to open the road, then they used the second grader and a heavy recovery truck to extricate the original grader.
That was the worst snow storm accumulation we experienced in Colorado. It took a week or so before the snow melted away enough to return to normalcy. But the saving grace was that we did not have the extreme cold (and ice) with it that you guys are experiencing now.