AP – A sprawling storm that pelted much of the United States’ (US) midsection with over a half a foot of snow and gusty winds created whiteout conditions that closed parts of two interstate highways and prompted officials to close schools and government offices in several states yesterday.
Up to 30 centimetres of snow could blanket a broad area stretching from southeastern Colorado all the way to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, including western Kansas, eastern Nebraska, large parts of Iowa, northern Missouri and northwestern Illinois, said Bob Oravec, a forecaster with the National Weather Service in College Park, Maryland.
Nearly 19 centimetres of snow fell in the northern city of Athol, Kansas, on Monday. The weather service office in Lincoln, Nebraska, predicted an additional eight to 13 centimetres was possible overnight, with winds possibly gusting as high as 64 kilometres per hour (kph).
Whiteout conditions in central Nebraska closed a long stretch of Interstate 80, while Kansas closed Interstate 70 from the central city of Russell all the way west to the Colorado border due to dangerous travel conditions. Several vehicles slid off I-70 in the northeastern part of the state, authorities said.
In Nebraska, federal courts in Omaha and Lincoln closed, and the US Army Corps of Engineers increased the water flow at a Missouri River dam on the Nebraska-South Dakota border near Yankton to reduce the chance of ice jams forming. Dubuque, on Iowa’s eastern border with Illinois, closed its city offices yesterday. Schools in Cedar Rapids in eastern Iowa were among those also closing.
The weather has already affected campaigning for Iowa’s January 15 precinct caucuses, where the snow is expected to be followed by frigid temperatures that could drift below -18 degrees Celsius (°C).
Parts of northern Missouri braced for up to a foot of snow as the system moved east.