Springfield News-Sun

Blizzard hits Sierra Nevada, as roads and ski resorts close

- By Brooke Hess and Ken Ritter

TRUCKEE, Calif. — A powerful blizzard that a meteorolog­ist termed “as bad as it gets” howled in the Sierra Nevada, closing a long stretch of Interstate 80 in California, forcing ski resorts to shut down, and leaving tens of thousands of homes without power.

More than 10 feet of snow was expected at higher elevations, National Weather Service meteorolog­ist William Churchill said Saturday, creating a “life-threatenin­g concern” for residents near Lake Tahoe and blocking travel on the key eastwest freeway.

“It’s a blizzard,” said Dubravka Tomasin, a resident of Truckee, California, for more than a decade. “It’s pretty harrowing.”

Kyle Frankland, a veteran snow plow driver, said several parts of his rig broke as he cleared wet snow underneath piles of powder.

“I’ve been in Truckee 44 years. This is a pretty good storm,” Frankland said. “It’s not record-breaking by any means, but it’s a good storm.”

Churchill said snow totals by late Sunday would range from 5 to 12 feet, with the highest accumulati­ons at elevations above 5,000 feet. Lower elevations were inundated with heavy rain.

He called the storm an “extreme blizzard for the Sierra Nevada, in particular, as well as other portions of Nevada and even extending into Utah and portions of western Colorado.” But he said he didn’t expect records to be broken.

“It’s certainly just about as bad as it gets in terms of the snow totals and the winds,” Churchill said. “It doesn’t get much worse than that.”

Earlier, the weather service warned that blowing snow was creating “extremely dangerous to impossible” driving conditions, with wind gusts in the high mountains at more

than 100 mph.

Avalanche danger was “high to extreme” in backcountr­y areas through Sunday evening throughout the central Sierra and greater Lake Tahoe area, the weather service said.

California authoritie­s on Friday shut down 100 miles of I-80, the main route between Reno and Sacramento, due to “spin outs, high winds, and low visibility.” There was no estimate when the freeway would reopen from the California-nevada border west of Reno to near Emigrant Gap, California.

Travel was treacherou­s east of the Sierra, where Caltrans also cited “multiple spin outs and collisions” and “whiteout conditions,” as it closed 90 miles of U.S. 395 from near Bishop in the Owens Valley to Bridgeport, north of Mono Lake.

Pacific Gas & Electric reported around 21,000 California homes and businesses without power around noon. NV Energy reported power outages for about 5,000 customers in northern Nevada.

In southern Nevada,

where the weather service issued a warning Saturday for high winds gusting to 70 mph, NV Energy reported more than 27,000 customers without power in and around Las Vegas.

A tornado Friday afternoon in Madera County, California, caused some damage to an elementary school, said Andy Bollenbach­er, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in Hanford.

Some ski resorts shut down Friday and were digging out Saturday with an eye toward reopening Sunday.

Palisades Tahoe, the largest resort on the north end of Tahoe and site of the 1960 Winter Olympics, closed all chairlifts Saturday due to snow, wind and low visibility.

Other areas closed Saturday included Sugar Bowl, Boreal and Sierra. Heavenly Mountain Resort planned to open late with limited operations.

The storm began barreling into the region Thursday. A blizzard warning through Sunday morning covers a 300-mile stretch

of the mountains.

Some ski lovers raced up to the mountains ahead of the storm.

Daniel Lavely, an avid skier who works at a Renoarea home/constructi­on supply store, was not one of them. He said Friday that he wouldn’t have considered making the hour-drive to ski on his season pass at a Tahoe resort because of the gale-force winds.

But most of his customers Friday seemed to think the storm wouldn’t be as bad as predicted, he said.

“I had one person ask me for a shovel,” Lavely said. “Nobody asked me about a snowblower, which we sold out the last storm about two weeks ago.”

Meteorolog­ists predicted as much as 10 feet of snow was possible in the mountains around Lake Tahoe by the weekend, with 3 to 6 feet in the communitie­s on the lake’s shores and more than a foot possible in the valleys on the Sierra’s eastern front, including Reno.

Yosemite National Park closed Friday and officials said it would remain closed through at least noon today.

 ?? BROOKE HESS-HOMEIER / AP ?? Snow covers the landscape in front of a store, Saturday in Truckee, Calif. A powerful blizzard howled in the Sierra Nevada as the biggest storm of the season shut down a long stretch of Interstate 80 in California and gusty winds and heavy rain hit lower elevations, leaving tens of thousands of homes without power.
BROOKE HESS-HOMEIER / AP Snow covers the landscape in front of a store, Saturday in Truckee, Calif. A powerful blizzard howled in the Sierra Nevada as the biggest storm of the season shut down a long stretch of Interstate 80 in California and gusty winds and heavy rain hit lower elevations, leaving tens of thousands of homes without power.

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