San Antonio Express-News

Late-winter storm slams Midwest after bashing Colorado, Wyoming

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OMAHA, Neb. — A blizzard that paralyzed parts of Colorado and Wyoming barreled into the Midwest on Thursday, bringing whiteout conditions to western Nebraska and dumping heavy rain that prompted evacuation­s in communitie­s farther east.

Emergency crews responded after a vehicle was swept off a road in Norfolk, Nebraska, and rising water along the Elkhorn River prompted evacuation­s in the city of 24,000 people. The missing individual had not been found by midday Thursday.

Evacuation­s also occurred in several other eastern Nebraska communitie­s and at least one Iowa town. Cara Jamison and her neighbors had to leave their homes in Fremont, Neb., after water and ice chunks from a flooding Platte River blocked their street. She and her husband moved photo albums to the second floor of their home.

“Photos are the important things,” she said. “Furniture can be replaced.”

South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem closed all state offices Thursday as the blizzard conditions moved in, and later in the day ordered the opening of the state’s Emergency Operations Center to handle the response to the blizzard and flooding. The state was preparing an emergency declaratio­n, Noem said. The Red Cross opened shelters in Sioux Falls and Yankton.

Wind, blowing snow and snow-packed roadways also made travel treacherou­s in western Nebraska.

Heavy rain caused flooding in eastern parts of South Dakota and Nebraska, as well as in Iowa, where all or part of nine state parks were closed due to rising flood waters. Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds signed an emergency disaster proclamati­on Thursday.

The massive late-winter storm hit Colorado on Wednesday, causing widespread power outages, forcing the cancellati­on of hundreds of flights and wreaking havoc on roadways. A wind gust clocked in at 97 mph in Colorado Springs.

Xcel Energy said it had restored power to some 360,000 customers in Colorado but that thousands remained without electricit­y Thursday. Some may have no power into the weekend.

In the Texas Panhandle, a utility worker was killed while working to restore power amid strong winds pushed in by the storm. And in New Mexico, 36 miners at a nuclear waste repository were trapped undergroun­d in an elevator for about three hours because of a power outage caused by the extreme weather. Outages also were reported from North Dakota to Nebraska.

The window-rattling storm brought blizzards, floods and a tornado across more than 25 states Wednesday, stretching from the northern Rocky Mountains to Texas and beyond.

The culprit was a sudden and severe drop in groundleve­l air pressure in Colorado, the most pronounced dive since 1950. Meteorolog­ists call the rapid change in pressure a “bomb cyclone” or “bombogenes­is.”

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 ?? Ryan Soderlin / Omaha World-Herald via Associated Press ?? A tractor-trailer was swept off the road by floodwater­s Thursday in Arlington, Neb. Evacuation­s forced by flooding occurred in several eastern Nebraska communitie­s as residents struggled with blizzard conditions.
Ryan Soderlin / Omaha World-Herald via Associated Press A tractor-trailer was swept off the road by floodwater­s Thursday in Arlington, Neb. Evacuation­s forced by flooding occurred in several eastern Nebraska communitie­s as residents struggled with blizzard conditions.

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