BFF-02 Storms snarl Thanksgiving travel in US

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BFF-02

US-WEATHER

Storms snarl Thanksgiving travel in US

WASHINGTON, Nov 28, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – A pair of storms packing heavy snow
and hurricane-force winds left tens of thousands without power in the United
States on Wednesday and wreaked havoc for Americans traveling for the
Thanksgiving holiday.

On one of the country’s busiest travel days of the year with an estimated
55 million people planning to drive or fly, highways in the West and Midwest
were closed because of snow, and hundreds of flights were canceled.

Giant, colorful character balloons floating through Manhattan during the
Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade, a cherished staple, might be grounded for
Thursday’s festivities because of gusting winds in the Big Apple.

“An extremely active weather pattern is in place across much of the US,”
the National Weather Service said.

A snow storm that caused near white-out blizzard conditions in Colorado
dumped a foot of snow in Wyoming on Tuesday, and was barreling eastward
toward the Great Lakes region in the central US.

Ploughs worked through the night at the airport in Minneapolis, a snow-
savvy city girding for possibly its biggest November dump ever.

At the airport in Denver, which was hit with a foot of snow, nearly 500
flights were canceled and another 500 were delayed.

On Monday night, 1,000 people slept at the airport.

Among them was Sonya Washington, bound for Thanksgiving with family in
Atlanta, who sat on a plane for two hours as the snow fell until her flight
was canceled. The next possible direct trip is Thursday night.

“Thanksgiving is over, then,” Washington told the Denver Post.

Out west, a dangerous storm hit southern Oregon and northern California
that meteorologists are calling a “bomb cyclone” — a rapidly intensifying
winter storm caused by a precipitous drop in atmospheric pressure.

– ‘Like bomb going off’ –

“The drop typically creates violent weather that arrives like a bomb going
off,” The Oregonian newspaper said.

It dumped a foot of snow, forced roads to close and prompted warnings for
people to just stay home.

One wind gust Tuesday in Lake Tahoe, Nevada was clocked at 93 miles (155
kilometers) per hour. Hurricane force begins at 74 mph.

The US Northwest has not been hit by such a powerful storm since 1962,
said Marc Spilde of the National Weather Service.

“This storm threatens to bring rain and mountain snow to much of
California, including places like San Francisco and Sacramento, places that
were largely spared by the past week’s rain,” said Accuweather senior
meteorologist Brian Thompson.

The National Weather Service said while the two separate storms are
expected to weaken Wednesday and Thursday, holiday travel would be affected
through the weekend.

It also warned of the potential of flash floods in southern California
through Thanksgiving Day because of heavy rain.

The storms and high winds have left nearly 300,000 people without power
across five states, including Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin, according to
poweroutages.us, a utility tracking site.

The nasty weather and blizzard conditions have also forced the closure of
major travel routes, including Interstate 5, the main thoroughfare from
Oregon into California.

Motorists on the highway reported being stuck for hours on the road
overnight, with some having to sleep in their cars.

In Arizona, the National Weather Service said it expected travel
conditions to be “difficult to impossible” from late afternoon Thursday
through Friday morning.

BSS/AFP/FI/ 0747 hrs