Las Vegas Review-Journal

Freezing rain wreaks havoc in Midwest

Areas endure slippery roads, power outages

- The Associated Press

DETROIT — Freezing rain left roads slippery, cut power to thousands of homes and businesses, and prompted officials to close hundreds of schools in parts of the Midwest on Wednesday, while flooding caused by ice jams prompted evacuation­s in Michigan and Illinois.

The National Weather Service issued a winter weather advisory warning of freezing rain, snow and another round of cold weather from Nebraska through Michigan. The warnings also come in the wake of snow, ice and shivering cold hitting normally mild cities in the West.

School districts including Detroit’s were closed Wednesday, as was Wayne State University after residents awoke to a thick coating of ice covering streets, driveways and vehicles. Freezing rain in Kansas and Missouri created icy roadways blamed in two separate crashes that killed three people. The icy condi- tions prompted officials to cancel classes at dozens of schools in both states.

In mid-michigan, flooding caused by an ice jam along the Grand River in Portland prompted officials to evacuate about 50 people from homes near the river. Jim Hilligan told the Lansing State Journal that emergency response officials went door-to-door evacuating residents.

“They weren’t rushing, but they were like, ‘You guys got to get out of your house, the river has broken the banks,’” Hilligan said.

Major utilities reported more than 50,000 customers were without power early Wednesday in the state, mostly in western Michigan, after freezing rain brought down trees and power lines.

Ice was also breaking up along the Kankakee River in northeaste­rn Illinois, flooding some roads and prompting evacuation­s. The National Weather Service issued a flashflood warning in the area Wednesday morning.

Dangerousl­y low temperatur­es set in across the Northern Plains, while storms moving into North Dakota and western Minnesota were expected to bring as much as a foot of snow and wind chills as low as minus 40.

Snowfall closed schools and kept snow plow operators busy across northern Arizona early Wednesday, with Flagstaff residents waking up to 9.4 inches of snow, according to the National Weather Service.

 ?? Steve Griffin The Associated Press ?? Katie and James Thomas, back, dig out from a snowstorm that dumped several inches of snow as their children make a sledding hill out of their car Wednesday in Salt Lake City.
Steve Griffin The Associated Press Katie and James Thomas, back, dig out from a snowstorm that dumped several inches of snow as their children make a sledding hill out of their car Wednesday in Salt Lake City.

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