First US winter storm of 2023 brings tornado, flood threat

First US winter storm of 2023 brings tornado, flood threat

Snow from strong, gusty winds is expected to make road travel virtually impossible.

Tornado watches and severe thunderstorm warnings were in effect across much of Mississippi. (AP pic)
LOS ANGELES:
The first major US winter storm system of the year dumped a frosty mix of snow, freezing rain and sleet from the northern Plains to the upper Great Lakes region yesterday while posing a tornado and flood threat to a large swath of the south.

The National Weather Service (NWS) forecast 2.5cm to 7.5cm would fall an hour, accompanied at times by thunder, and more than a foot would accumulate in parts of Nebraska, South Dakota and Minnesota yesterday.

Drifting and blowing snow from strong, gusty winds was expected to make road travel virtually impossible in some areas, while snow fog, mist and freezing rain created treacherous driving conditions in others, the NWS said.

Winter storm warnings, ice storm warnings and winter weather advisories were posted in and around Minneapolis and St Paul in Minnesota as freezing rain swept north through the region, followed by bands of heavy snow, according to the NWS.

The wintry blast, expected to spread into New England by today, was part of a larger weather front bringing heavy showers and a chance of severe thunderstorms, hail and tornadoes to the lower Mississippi Valley, Gulf Coast, Tennessee Valley and southern Appalachians.

Tornado watches and severe thunderstorm warnings were in effect across much of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia, along with flood watches posted along the southern fringe of that zone.

“It’s all part of the same system. The heavy snowfall is occurring on the west to northern side of the storm … and then the rainfall and severe weather is across the south,” NWS meteorologist Allison Santorelli said.

Nearly 200 flights through Minneapolis-St Paul International Airport were cancelled yesterday, according to flight tracker FlightAware.

On the West Coast, northern California braced for another bout of heavy rain and flooding from an “atmospheric river” of dense moisture.

It was expected to bring drenching rains and the possibility of renewed flooding to northern and central California, starting today.

Heavy snow was expected to return to the Sierra Nevada mountains today, along with coastal rain and higher-elevation snow in the Pacific Northwest.

Northern California was still recovering from a weekend Pacific storm that triggered floods, mudslides, power outages and road closures.

Santorelli said high winds accompanying the latest batch of impending downpours could uproot trees and knock down tree limbs, causing more blackouts.

As many as 21,000-plus homes and businesses in northern California were without electricity by early yesterday, data from poweroutage.us showed.

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