Daily Times (Primos, PA)

‘Epic’ storm brings blizzards, floods & tornado to mid-U.S.

- By Bob Moen a nd Dan Elliott

CHEYENNE, WYO. >> A window-rattling late winter storm brought blizzards, floods and a tornado across more than 25 states Wednesday, stretching from the northern Rocky Mountains to Texas and beyond.

“This is a very epic cyclone,” said Greg Carbin, chief of forecast operations for the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s Weather Prediction Center. “We’re looking at something that will go down in the history books.”

In Colorado, a state patrol officer was hit and killed by a car as he was helping another driver who slid off Interstate 76 near Denver.

Corporal Daniel Groves, 52, was outside his patrol car when he was struck. He died at a hospital.

Hundreds of drivers were stranded on Colorado highways, including 500 in the Colorado Springs area alone. Gov. Jared Polis activated the National Guard to help find and rescue snowbound drivers.

Scores of motorists took refuge at truck stops in eastern Wyoming, and blowing snow forced portions of major highways to close in Colorado, Nebraska, and South Dakota.

Hundreds of flights were canceled at Denver Internatio­nal Airport, and nearly 40 were grounded in Colorado Springs.

“It caught me completely off guard,” said Sarah Brin of Santa Fe, New Mexico, who was stranded at the Denver airport.

It was supposed to be a brief layover on her flight home from the South by Southwest Film Festival in Austin, Texas, but it turned into an overnight stay.

She booked a room in a downtown hotel and reserved a spot on a shuttle van, but some shuttle trips were canceled because of the weather.

“We’ll see if they actually show up,” she said.

Many schools and government offices closed for the day. Xcel Energy said high winds caused about 184,000 homes and businesses to lose electricit­y, mostly in the Denver area. Xcel spokesman Mark Stutz said zero visibility made conditions difficult for repair workers, and it could take days to restore power to everyone.

In North Texas, severe thundersto­rms damaged buildings and flipped over small planes parked at an airport.

Flooding forced evacuation­s in northeast Nebraska and western Iowa, including a retirement home in Pierce, Nebraska. Residents of Avoca, Iowa, were filling sandbags to keep floodwater­s from spreading, and the American Red Cross set up a shelter for anyone who was displaced.

Parts of seven states were under blizzard warnings, and 20 states were under some level of high wind alert, Carbin said.

A tornado in New Mexico ripped roofs from buildings in the small town of Dexter, about 200 miles (320 kilometers) southwest of Albuquerqu­e. Authoritie­s said five people were hurt, but none of the injuries were life-threatenin­g. A dairy euthanized about 150 cows injured by the tornado.

Chaves County Sheriff Mike Herrington said the tornado “took out” about

10 homes on one street. High winds knocked 25 railroad freight cars off a bridge into a mostly dry riverbed near Logan in northeast New Mexico. No one was injured, New Mexico State Police said.

A wind gust of 92 mph

(148 kph) was recorded in the mountains northwest of Denver.

The storm was expected to drop up to 22 inches (56 centimeter­s) of snow in Wyoming, 14 inches (36 centimeter­s) in South Dakota and a foot (31 centimeter­s) in Colorado.

Forecaster­s said the winds would pile snow into deep drifts.

The vast storm stretched at least 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers), said meteorolog­ist Ryan Maue of weathermod­els.com.

“It looks beautiful on satellite as long as you are not caught on it,” he said.

The culprit was a sudden and severe drop in groundleve­l air pressure in Colorado, the most pronounced dive since 1950, Carbin said. It was caused by a combinatio­n of the jet stream and normal conditions in the wind shadow of the Rockies.

Air rushed into the lowpressur­e area and then rose into the atmosphere.

“It’s like a vacuum cleaner, really,” Carbin said. When that much air rushes higher into the atmosphere, it causes severe weather.

Meteorolog­ists call the rapid change in pressure a “bomb cyclone” or “bombogenes­is.”

Forecaster­s had warned about the storm for days, Maue said.

“Everybody saw it coming. Some people underestim­ated it so they’re stranded and that’s unfortunat­e,” he said.

 ?? JACOB BYK — THE WYOMING TRIBUNE EAGLE VIA AP ?? A man crosses Crow Creek during a blizzard on Wednesday in Cheyenne, Wyo. Heavy snow hit Cheyenne about mid-morning Wednesday and was spreading into Colorado and Nebraska.
JACOB BYK — THE WYOMING TRIBUNE EAGLE VIA AP A man crosses Crow Creek during a blizzard on Wednesday in Cheyenne, Wyo. Heavy snow hit Cheyenne about mid-morning Wednesday and was spreading into Colorado and Nebraska.
 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Shoppers struggle to head to their vehicles outside a grocery store as a late winter storm packing hurricanef­orce winds and snow sweeps over the intermount­ain West Wednesday in Denver.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Shoppers struggle to head to their vehicles outside a grocery store as a late winter storm packing hurricanef­orce winds and snow sweeps over the intermount­ain West Wednesday in Denver.
 ?? CHRIS MACHIAN — OMAHA WORLD-HERALD VIA AP ?? A truck drives southbound through flood water on 60th Street Wednesday in Omaha, Neb. A vast and powerful storm is bringing blizzards, floods and a tornado to more than 25 states, stretching from the northern Rocky Mountains to Texas and beyond. Flooding forced evacuation­s in northeast Nebraska and western Iowa.
CHRIS MACHIAN — OMAHA WORLD-HERALD VIA AP A truck drives southbound through flood water on 60th Street Wednesday in Omaha, Neb. A vast and powerful storm is bringing blizzards, floods and a tornado to more than 25 states, stretching from the northern Rocky Mountains to Texas and beyond. Flooding forced evacuation­s in northeast Nebraska and western Iowa.

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