Wintry storm brings winds, snow to East after blasting Midwest, leaving trail of bitter cold
By APThursday, December 10, 2009
Wintry storm blows east with high winds, snow
BUFFALO, N.Y. — A deadly, windy storm that has tortured a wide swath of the country for days is threatening to drop up a foot of snow on parts of New York, Pennsylvania and New England before blowing off the coast of Maine.
Commuters from Des Moines to Chicago braced for single digit temperatures and icy roads, while the National Weather Service predicted wind chill values as low as negative 25 in parts of Wisconsin, Iowa and Illinois.
Police say a double-decker bus carrying 12 passengers from New York City to Toronto overturned on a highway when the driver made an unsafe lane change as snow and high winds blew through Buffalo before dawn Thursday.
The storm will have affected about two-thirds of the country by the time it moves out Thursday night. It has been blamed for at least 17 deaths.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Frigid temperatures iced the Upper Midwest as a storm that dumped more than a foot of snow in several states from Iowa to New England threatened another round on Thursday as it neared the end of its cross-country trek.
Commuters from Des Moines to Chicago were warned of morning temperatures reaching 10 degrees at best and icy roads. Wind chill values could dip as low as negative 25 in parts of Wisconsin, Iowa and Illinois, according to the National Weather Service.
Blizzard warnings covered parts of southwest Michigan where another 12 inches of snow was expected by Friday evening. Up to 18 inches could fall in parts of central and western New York, while wind gusts approaching 60 mph were reported near Buffalo.
But most of the Midwest was focused on digging out of the snow — up to 19 inches in some areas — and bracing for bitter-cold weather.
“It’s already very cold across the entire region,” said Casey Sullivan, a weather service meteorologist in Romeoville, Ill., adding that parts of northern Illinois may hit only 2 degrees. “Iowa’s even colder.”
Des Moines, which saw 16 inches of snow by Wednesday, could see a high near 9 degrees — but wind chill values could make temperatures feel like minus 25. In Madison, Wis., near where almost 19 inches of snow fell, the wind chill could hit minus 20, according to the weather service.
New England, also pounded by heavy snow and strong winds on Wednesday, expected more snow but temperatures to hover around freezing.
Wind gusts of nearly 60 mph may have contributed to a double-decker bus overturning Thursday on the New York State Thruway near Buffalo. The driver and eight of the 12 passengers were taken to hospitals, but none was seriously injured, state police said.
The storm was expected to move off the coast of Maine by Thursday night, having affected about two-thirds of the country since hitting California earlier this week, meteorologists predicted.
The storm was blamed for at least 17 deaths, most in traffic accidents. Hundreds of schools were closed, power was knocked out to thousands of people from Missouri to New York and hundreds of flights were canceled.
In northern New York, up to a foot fell on Wednesday and more than 3 feet was expected by the week’s end. Areas in Maine and New Hampshire received up to a foot of snow. Up to 7 inches fell in northeast Pennsylvania.
The storm drenched California in rain, blanketed the mountain West in snow and shattered snowfall records in Flagstaff, Ariz. earlier this week. Wind gusts of up to 100 mph were reported in New Mexico, wind chills as low as minus 40 hit southern Montana, and heavy rain and flooding affected parts of the South, according to the National Weather Service.
The storm felt like a rude surprise after an unseasonably warm and dry November in parts of the Midwest. The massive system is the first major blast of wintry weather for many parts of the region.
“I’ve been dreading this day,” said Kim Brust, shoveling the sidewalk in front of his Minneapolis home before sunrise Wednesday. “I was starting to enjoy the global warming.”
While an inconvenience for many, others took an opportunity to play.
At least 3,000 University of Wisconsin-Madison students took advantage of an unplanned day off and hurled snowballs at each other in a massive snowball fight. Classes were canceled for the first time in 19 years due to weather.
Some came holding trays as shields. Others were bundled up to protect themselves from the below-freezing temperatures and winds that gusted to more than 20 mph — though several went shirtless, while at least one had on pajamas.
“I figured with the day off, there was no better way to spend it than with a snowball fight,” said Matt Moerel, 19, of Vadnais Heights, Minn.
Many New England residents braced for bone-chilling winds after digging out from a foot or more of snow. The weather was welcomed by 8-year-old Gavin Graham of Concord, N.H. He spent two hours sledding.
“It was really good sledding. The snow was puffy, and that was really good because we had little jumps already made,” he said. “It was awesome having the day off from school.”
Associated Press writers Jeff Baenen in St. Paul, Minn., Scott Bauer in Madison, Wis., Pat Condon in Minneapolis, Michael J. Crumb in Des Moines, Nigel Duara in Iowa City, Iowa, and Holly Ramer in Concord, N.H., contributed to this report.
Tags: Accidents, Buffalo, Concord, Des Moines, Frosts And Freezing, Illinois, Iowa, Madison, Maine, Minneapolis, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New York, North America, Traffic, Transportation, United States, Wisconsin