Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Powerful storm disrupts nation’s busiest travel weekend

- By Claire Galofaro

A powerful storm making its way east from California is causing major disruption­s during the year’s busiest travel weekend, as forecaster­s warned that intensifyi­ng snow and ice could thwart millions of people across the country hoping to get home after Thanksgivi­ng.

The storm caused the death of at least one person in South Dakota and shut down highways in the western U.S., stranding drivers in California and prompting authoritie­s in Arizona to plead with travelers to wait out the weather before attempting to travel.

The storm was expected to track east through the weekend — into the Plains on Friday, the Midwest by Saturday and the Northeast on Sunday — pummeling a huge portion of the country with snow, ice or flash flooding.

The National Weather Service said travel could become impossible in some places.

The weather could be particular­ly disruptive on Sunday, when millions of holiday travelers head home. Airlines for America, the airline industry’s trade group, expects 3.1 million passengers during what could be the busiest day ever recorded for American air travel.

The weather service issued storm warnings Friday for a swath of the country stretching from Montana to Nebraska to Wisconsin, with heavy snow anticipate­d in parts of Utah, Colorado, Montana and Wyoming.

Strong winds gusting to 90 mph were possible in mountains and foothills, and could reach 65 mph in the Plains, creating poor visibility.

One hopeful traveler asked the weather service Friday on Twitter whether it would be advisable to drive to Duluth, Minnesota, over the weekend. The agency warned: “If you are in Duluth by tonight, you will likely be stuck there until at least Sunday afternoon due to heavy snow and blizzard conditions.”

Northern Michigan University reopened its residence halls, two days earlier than normal for a Thanksgivi­ng weekend, to give students more options as forecaster­s predicted a foot or more of snow.

“We want to make people aware of what they could be driving into,” campus police Chief Mike Bath said.

The airline industry group estimated a record 31.6 million people will travel over a 12-day holiday period. Airlines on Friday said they were so far operating as usual as they monitored the weather.

Delta said inclement weather could disrupt travel at airports in the upper Midwest on Saturday and the Northeast on Sunday and Monday. It offered to let customers reschedule or cancel flights. American Airlines issued similar waivers for Rapid City, South Dakota.

Sections of South Dakota were under a blizzard warning and could see howling winds and as much as 2 feet of snow.

Authoritie­s reported a fatal crash after a driver lost control of his pickup on an ice-covered road. A 37-yearold passenger died after the truck slid into a ditch and rolled. The driver and one other passenger survived.

The South Dakota Highway Patrol posted a photo on Facebook of another crash — a semi-truck that veered from Interstate 90 near Rapid City. “Do not travel if you don’t have to!” the agency wrote.

Karlee Wilkinson, a

22-year-old college student in Long Beach, California, missed a Thanksgivi­ng weekend gathering entirely because of snow on the way to her destinatio­n.

She, her girlfriend and her roommate left Thursday for what was supposed to be a two-hour drive. But the snow started falling in flakes bigger than she’d ever seen, the highway became gridlocked, and their car kept overheatin­g.

At first it seemed like an adventure: They made snowmen in the highway median. But when the sun set, the temperatur­e dropped, and they decided to turn around and head home. Their Thanksgivi­ng dinner was chicken nuggets from a fast food drive-thru.

“This is not how this is supposed to go, this is not what an American Thanksgivi­ng is supposed to be,” Wilkinson said. “It can only get better than this. I’ll never have a worse Thanksgivi­ng, knock on wood.”

Galofaro reported from Louisville, Kentucky; Stephen

Groves in Sioux Falls, South Dakota; Colleen Slevin in Denver, Colorado; John Antczak in Los

Angeles; Ed White in Detroit; and Paul Davenport in Phoenix contribute­d to this report.

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 ?? CODY BASHORE/ARIZONA DAILY SUN VIA AP ?? Street signs are covered in snow in north Flagstaff, Ariz., Friday, Nov. 29. A powerful storm making its way east from California is threatenin­g major disruption­s during the year’s busiest travel weekend, as forecaster­s warned that intensifyi­ng snow and ice could thwart millions across the country hoping to get home after Thanksgivi­ng.
CODY BASHORE/ARIZONA DAILY SUN VIA AP Street signs are covered in snow in north Flagstaff, Ariz., Friday, Nov. 29. A powerful storm making its way east from California is threatenin­g major disruption­s during the year’s busiest travel weekend, as forecaster­s warned that intensifyi­ng snow and ice could thwart millions across the country hoping to get home after Thanksgivi­ng.

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