The Arizona Republic

Winds in Midwest leave 500K without power

- Ryan W. Miller USA TODAY

Historic winds battered parts of the Midwest on Thursday after severe weather killed at least one person in Iowa and left nearly 350,000 people without power in Michigan and Wisconsin alone.

Parts of Michigan remained under a high wind warning as of midday Thursday, but the storms were forecast to shift north of the Great Lakes, according to the National Weather Service.

The historic winds caused clusters of tornadoes Wednesday and downed trees and power lines across the region. Wildfires in Kansas carried smoke and dust into Iowa. The winds caused a semitruck on U.S. Highway 151 in eastern Iowa to roll onto its side, killing the driver, state patrol officers said.

From Colorado to Michigan, more than 500,000 customers were without power Thursday morning, according to the online tracker Poweroutag­e.us.

In Des Moines, Iowa, the wind gusts reached up to 74 mph, which hadn’t been seen in the city since the 1970s, the local Weather Service office tweeted.

Winds on Lake Michigan also reached 74 mph, the Weather Service in Chicago said, and waves reached as high as 15 feet in some areas. In parts of Colorado, winds reached 95 mph.

Staff at the Kansas City Internatio­nal Airport had to evacuate the air traffic control tower Wednesday evening, the airport tweeted. The storms also disrupted travel at the Des Moines Internatio­nal Airport.

At least 20 tornadoes were reported in Nebraska and Iowa, according to the Storm Prediction Center. In Plainview, Minnesota, the Weather Service said a tornado was reported; it would be the first December tornado ever in the state if confirmed, KARE-TV said.

The Storm Prediction Center said Wednesday set a record for the most hurricane-force wind gusts – more than 75 mph – in a day at 55. Previous records had been set in summer months.

Des Moines tied the record for the highest-ever December temperatur­e in Iowa at 74 degrees. Thurman, Iowa, had owned the record for the highest December temperatur­e in the state on Dec. 6, 1939, according to Iowa State Climatolog­ist Justin Glisan.

 ?? TRAVIS HEYING/AP ?? Dust from heavy winds obscures the sun Wednesday in Jetmore, Kan., as winds caused tornadoes and downed power lines across the region.
TRAVIS HEYING/AP Dust from heavy winds obscures the sun Wednesday in Jetmore, Kan., as winds caused tornadoes and downed power lines across the region.

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