Snowstorm in central US snarls Thanksgiving travel plans

27 Nov 2019 • 11:14 AM MYT
Malay Mail
Malay Mail

Latest Malaysia breaking stories on politics, analysis and opinions

image is not available

Maggie, a Golden Retriever dog, runs while playing in snow in Windsor, Colorado November 26, 2019. — @KTwriteswords/video image via Reuters

WASHINGTON, Nov 27 — A powerful snowstorm swept across Colorado and into the US Midwest yesterday, blocking roads and causing hundreds of flight cancellations that threatened travel plans for many people hoping to fly or drive to Thanksgiving feasts this week.

The storm dumped 30 cm of snow in parts of Colorado and buffeted the Denver area with wind gusts of 72 kph. Nearly 500 flights were cancelled and more than 350 delayed at Denver International Airport by yesterday afternoon.

“We just landed at the Denver Airport! Crazy conditions. Literally 0 visibility,” Amber Kimbrell, a high school science teacher from Huntsville, Alabama, said in a Twitter message. She posted a photo of a runway covered in white.

Some 55 million travellers planned to fly or drive at least 80 km from their homes for the Thanksgiving holiday on Thursday, according to the American Automobile Association, but the snow will likely alter those plans for many.

“Nothing like starting Thanksgiving break with boarding the plane in the snow, sitting on the tarmac for 2 hours,” Jude Matyo-Cepero, a University of Nebraska professor, wrote on Instagram.

By early yestertday afternoon, the storm was pushing northeast, with parts of northwest Kansas and western Nebraska reporting snow accumulation of 10 to 20 cm, coupled with winds of 80 kph, the National Weather Service said.

Treacherous conditions forced the closure of eastbound Interstate 70 from east of Denver to the Kansas state line, and Interstate 76 from Denver northeast to the Nebraska state line, the Colorado Department of Transportation said. Officials advised drivers to stay off the roads, with strong winds creating white-out conditions across the region.

Schools and many retailers in the Denver metropolitan area were closed. But grocery stores, already well-stocked ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday, were ready for a deluge of customers.

“So far so good. It doesn't seem to be impacting us much,” Phil Vanderlaan, a cashier at a Safeway store in Denver, said by phone. “Probably later throughout the day it might.”

A stronger storm was expected to hit Northern California and Oregon by last night, the weather service said, which may drop 30 to 90 cm of snow across mountainous areas. — Reuters

View Original Article