Los Angeles Times

Tahoe is buried in snow, with bitter cold ahead

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RENO — The coldest weather to hit the RenoTahoe area in nearly five years is expected to arrive by the weekend on the heels of a series of storms that have dumped more than 10 feet of snow on parts of the Sierra over the last week and continue to wreak havoc on travel.

The aftermath of the storms again snarled traffic on Interstate 80 and state highways around Lake Tahoe on Wednesday. Gov. Steve Sisolak declared a state of emergency for northern Nevada along the Sierra’s eastern front due to the snowy conditions.

“Crews are battling fallen trees and power lines as well as seven-day snow totals of 6 to 11 feet,” the National Weather Service said.

A winter weather advisory remained in effect through 10 p.m. Wednesday around Lake Tahoe, where a couple of more inches of snow were expected at lake level and up to 6 inches above elevations of 7,000 feet. Flurries were falling again Wednesday in RenoSparks.

The service said the next front coming in from the north will bring the region the “coldest air in nearly five years” with single-digit lows in Reno by Friday night and temperatur­es well below zero early Saturday and Sunday in the Sierra and around Lake Tahoe.

The Douglas County Community & Senior Center opened a warming shelter in rural Gardnervil­le south of Carson City in anticipati­on of the bitter cold.

On Wednesday, I-80 was reopened from the California-Nevada line to near Truckee, Calif., but chains were mandatory for about a 40-mile stretch west of Truckee to Gold Run, Calif., for all vehicles except those with four-wheel drive and snow tires. Chains also were required on most all other highways in and around Lake Tahoe.

The California Highway Patrol warned travel was extremely slow on I-80 due to backed-up traffic where icy conditions persist and urged motorists to avoid any nonessenti­al travel.

“The last thing we want is for I-80 to close due to traffic collisions,” the patrol tweeted.

A statement released by Sisolak’s office said the emergency declaratio­n will allow state officials to order vehicles traveling on mountain highways to turn around and return to lower elevations until weather conditions subside and the roadways are safe to use.

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