Santa Fe New Mexican

Storms threaten U.S. holiday travel

- By Colleen Slevin and David Koenig

DENVER — Heavy snow and wind shut down highways Tuesday in Colorado and Wyoming, closed schools in Nebraska and forced more than 1,000 travelers to sleep overnight in Denver’s airport after hundreds of flights were canceled just as Thanksgivi­ng travel moved into high gear.

The storm was heading to South Dakota, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin, while a “bomb cyclone” weather phenomenon began toppling trees, knocking out power and dumping snow as it barreled into California and Oregon — making for a double whammy of early wintry weather.

The National Weather Service in Northern California urged people to wait to travel for the holiday until the weather improves.

At Denver Internatio­nal Airport, about 10 inches of snow mixed with winds that limited visibility prompted the cancellati­on of about 30 percent of the airport’s average daily 1,600 flights.

The storm dumped nearly 3 feet of snow in parts of northern Colorado and closed long stretches of highways there and in Wyoming. One person was killed, and two others were injured when a tractortra­iler jackknifed and was hit by two other trucks on Interstate 70 near the Colorado ski town of Vail.

The system moved east, allowing the Denver airport to begin returning to normal.

Southwest Airlines canceled about 200 flights. Spokesman Brad Hawkins said it would take “a couple of days” to get stranded passengers on other flights because there are few during the pre-Thanksgivi­ng travel crush. That makes it hard for airlines to rebook passengers.

About 1,100 people spent the night at the airport, including many cadets from the Air Force Academy who either missed flights or wanted to get to the airport before road conditions deteriorat­ed, airport spokeswoma­n Alex Renteria said.

Among them was cadet Sadie Luhman, whose trip to the airport took three hours — twice the normal driving time. She got to the airport at 1 a.m., 10 hours before her scheduled flight to Chicago for Thanksgivi­ng.

“I just wanted to beat the storm. We kind of left in the middle of it so it kind of didn’t work, but we got here,” she told Denver news station KCNC-TV.

Airport workers handed out blankets, diapers, baby formula, toothbrush­es and toothpaste to passengers who camped out on floors and in chairs.

Many government offices closed in the Denver area and Cheyenne, Wyo., along with colleges and schools not already on holiday break. In Nebraska, several school districts canceled classes Wednesday, and the southweste­rn city of Sidney had received about 8 inches of snow.

It wasn’t a snow day for everybody. Carli Webber cleared snow off her car and braced herself for her commute to a call center near Denver’s Union Station.

“I am not like a lot of people and cannot work from home, so I have no choice but to go,” she said.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A maintenanc­e man uses a snowblower to clear a sidewalk along Eighth Avenue near Lincoln Street in Denver as a storm packing snow and high winds sweeps in over the region Tuesday. Meanwhile, Thanksgivi­ng travelers were forced to wrestle with snow-packed roads and flight delays or cancellati­ons throughout the West.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/ASSOCIATED PRESS A maintenanc­e man uses a snowblower to clear a sidewalk along Eighth Avenue near Lincoln Street in Denver as a storm packing snow and high winds sweeps in over the region Tuesday. Meanwhile, Thanksgivi­ng travelers were forced to wrestle with snow-packed roads and flight delays or cancellati­ons throughout the West.

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