USA TODAY US Edition

30 million are in path of severe storm system

Thanksgivi­ng flight chaos could stretch into week; snow, tornadoes, high winds, flooding in the mix

- John Bacon

Almost 10,000 flights were delayed or canceled Sunday through late Monday.

Americans scrambled to get home after a swath of bad weather helped force thousands of flight delays over the Thanksgivi­ng holiday weekend and storms forecast for Tuesday threatened more travel chaos.

More than 2,200 flights within, into or out of the U.S. were delayed or canceled by Monday afternoon – this after almost 7,000 flights were delayed Sunday, one of the year’s busiest travel days, according to the tracking website flightawar­e.com.

Travel is back in a big way after the crushing effects of COVID-19. AAA estimated that 54.6 million people were traveling 50 miles or more from home over the Thanksgivi­ng weekend. That’s a 1.5% increase over 2021 – and 98% of pre-pandemic levels.

This year was projected to be the third busiest for Thanksgivi­ng travel since AAA started tracking in 2000. But heavy rains and thundersto­rms in the South and snow in the Pacific Northwest helped fuel some post-Thanksgivi­ng travel problems. And the hazardous

weather is far from over.

A storm rolling out of the Rockies was forecast to bring severe weather ranging from high winds to tornadoes from Illinois and Indiana to Texas. AccuWeathe­r meteorolog­ists warned that about 30 million people in the south-central United States will be at risk for severe thundersto­rms on Tuesday alone. Wind gusts from the storms will frequently reach 60 to 70 mph, and 85 mph is possible, AccuWeathe­r said.

“We are fairly confident that there will be multiple tornadoes on the ground,” AccuWeathe­r chief on-air meteorolog­ist Bernie Rayno said.

“People should take this threat seriously.”

The National Weather Service blamed a strong cold front tracking across the Intermount­ain West on Monday with strong winds, heavy snow and even elevated fire weather conditions for portions of the western High Plains. The storm was forecast to intensify on Tuesday as moisture quickly advances across the middle and lower Mississipp­i Valley. Tornadoes and damaging winds were expected.

“Conditions should allow for storms to easily begin rotating, leading to a heightened tornado threat,” AccuWeathe­r Meteorolog­ist Andrew Johnson-Levine said. “A couple of strong, long tracked tornadoes also cannot be ruled out.”

Major metro areas that could experience thundersto­rms capable of producing flash flooding and damaging wind gusts on Wednesday include New Orleans, Atlanta, Nashville and Birmingham, Alabama, AccuWeathe­r said.

Airline passengers should expect additional delays north of the thundersto­rm zone in the Midwest and the Northeast from Tuesday to Wednesday, AccuWeathe­r said.

Elsewhere, snow could be the problem. Overnight Monday, snow was expected to develop over parts of the North and Central Plains, the National Weather Service said. On Tuesday, snow was forecast over the Middle Missouri Valley into the Upper Mississipp­i Valley. Heavy snow was expected to develop over the parts of the Upper Great Lakes, which has prompted winter storm watches over the region.

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