A powerful system of storms churned across the Rocky Mountains and into the Midwest on Wednesday, dumping snow, driving high winds and leaving tens of millions of people in its projected path.
Blizzard conditions were expected in parts of Colorado, Kansas and Nebraska, the National Weather Service said.
Denver was covered in 5 inches of snow Wednesday afternoon, and authorities said high winds caused crashes and road closures in western Colorado, The Associated Press reported. Airlines canceled 50 flights at Denver’s airport,according to NBC affiliate KUSA.
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In Chicago, the Illinois Emergency Management Agency (IEMA) issued an alert encouraging residents to stay aware of local forecasts and “be prepared to act quickly if storm warnings are issued.”
“It’s a huge, typical November storm,” Weather Channel lead forecaster Kevin Roth said. “Winter is on the way, that’s for sure.”
The snowstorm that hit Denver was expected to continue into the western Plains,” Roth said, with many areas seeing their first proper snow of this winter.
“Blizzard conditions will affect northeast Colorado, northwest Kansas and southwest Nebraska but Denver should escape,” he said.
Winds could reach 35 mph, resulting in areas of blowing and drifting snow, the National Weather Service said.
NOAA’s Storm Prediction Center has issued a tornado watch effective until 6 p.m. CST for parts of southeast Nebraska, southern and central Iowa, northern Missouri and northeast Kansas, The Weather Channel reported. That includes Kansas City, Des Moines and Omaha.
Chicago is likely to see thunderstorms and gusty winds but should escape the tornado threat, Roth said, but Kansas City was “not completely out of the woods.”









