Brutal Winter Storm Heads East
Last updated 6:46 p.m. Eastern
A fierce storm left dangerous ice, heavy snow and vicious winds in its wake as it slogged eastward Wednesday, snarling traffic and closing hundreds of schools from the Upper Midwest through New England.
More than a foot of snow was expected in parts of Illinois, Wisconsin and Iowa, where the National Weather Service warned of "extremely dangerous blizzard conditions" and near whiteout driving conditions. Wind gusts of up to 50 mph could build snow drifts between 8 and 15 feet tall. Parts of New England also girded themselves for bone-chilling wind gusts and snow accumulations of up to a foot.
The storm was blamed for at least 12 deaths, most in traffic accidents.
"It's horrible out there," said Todd Lane, an assistant manager of a Quik Trip convenience store in Des Moines, where several inches of new snow was reported overnight. Plow drivers came into the store all night seeking energy drinks and coffee to keep them alert.
The National Weather Service says that by the time this storm moves off the coast of Maine Thursday night, it may have affected as much as two-thirds of the country, reports CBS News correspondent Dean Reynolds.
Motorists got stuck on drift-blocked highways all over Iowa. State troopers were dispatched with National Guard soldiers in Humvees, but some drivers had to wait two hours or longer for rescue. Even the plows were being pulled off the roads because snow drifts were too high to navigate.
"They're not even plowing the streets anymore because the wind will just blow it back down and cover it," said Dan Hansen, a carrier for the U.S. Postal Service in Iowa City. He was bundled up in hand and feet warmers, snow boots and a parka to brave his route. "It'll get worse before it gets better."
In Illinois, fifteen percent of the corn crop is wilting under a layer of snow and may be lost, Reynolds reports.
In Wisconsin, as many as a dozen tractor-trailers were stuck on interstate ramps made impassible by heavy snow where I-39, I-90 and I-94 intersect near Madison, the State Patrol said. Holiday shoppers hoping to use the snow day to get ahead on their gift lists also were out of luck: The city's two largest malls were closed.
The storm felt like a rude surprise after an unseasonably warm and dry November in parts of the region. The massive system is the first major blast of winter weather for many parts of the Midwest.
Reporting live from Minnesota, where the windchill was minus 2 degrees, CBS "Early Show" weather anchor Dave Price said the system started out as a typical winter storm, but the combination of bitter cold arctic air and a fair amount of moisture energized it. Add in a powerful jet stream, and it has been driven across the country at about a 60 mph pace.
"I've been dreading this day," said Kim Brust, shoveling the sidewalk in front of his Minneapolis home before sunrise Wednesday. "I was starting to enjoy the global warming."
Hundreds of flights were canceled or delayed at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago, and only a few were scheduled at Des Moines International Airport.
Blizzard warnings also covered eastern Nebraska, where overnight snowfall reports of 12 inches were common, and parts of Kansas, Illinois and Minnesota. Snow also fell in western and central Michigan. Thousands of power outages were reported in Illinois, Missouri, Michigan and Wisconsin.
In the West, pounded by the storm's rain and snow earlier this week, bitter wind chills as low as 40 below swept across portions of southern Montana. The biting winds also were moving across Wyoming and South Dakota, according to the National Weather Service.
Maine and New Hampshire could see snow accumulations of 6 to 10 inches capped off by rain and sleet in the evening. In northern New York, as much as a foot of snow was expected to accumulate Wednesday and more than 3 feet was expected by the week's end near the Great Lakes.
"It's a monster of a storm," Lee said.
The storm drenched California with rain, blanketed the mountain West with snow and brought 100 mph winds to New Mexico earlier this week. More than 20 inches of snow fell over Flagstaff, Ariz. - more than four times the record of 5 inches set in 1956. Heavy rain also hit some parts of the South, and more than 4 inches reported in spots in New Orleans on Tuesday.
At least 12 deaths were blamed on the weather, including an Arizona hunter who was killed Monday night when a large pine tree snapped and crushed him as he slept in a tent. The driver of a sport utility vehicle that plunged 90 feet off an icy road into the Texas Panhandle's Palo Duro Canyon also died. Three fatal accidents were reported along slippery roads in Missouri, and a Minnesota driver who braked to avoid a stalled vehicle and wound up crashing down an embankment.
© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report. A fierce storm left dangerous ice, heavy snow and vicious winds in its wake as it slogged eastward Wednesday, snarling traffic and closing hundreds of schools from the Upper Midwest through New England.
More than a foot of snow was expected in parts of Illinois, Wisconsin and Iowa, where the National Weather Service warned of "extremely dangerous blizzard conditions" and near whiteout driving conditions. Wind gusts of up to 50 mph could build snow drifts between 8 and 15 feet tall. Parts of New England also girded themselves for bone-chilling wind gusts and snow accumulations of up to a foot.
The storm was blamed for at least 12 deaths, most in traffic accidents.
"It's horrible out there," said Todd Lane, an assistant manager of a Quik Trip convenience store in Des Moines, where several inches of new snow was reported overnight. Plow drivers came into the store all night seeking energy drinks and coffee to keep them alert.
The National Weather Service says that by the time this storm moves off the coast of Maine Thursday night, it may have affected as much as two-thirds of the country, reports CBS News correspondent Dean Reynolds.
Motorists got stuck on drift-blocked highways all over Iowa. State troopers were dispatched with National Guard soldiers in Humvees, but some drivers had to wait two hours or longer for rescue. Even the plows were being pulled off the roads because snow drifts were too high to navigate.
"They're not even plowing the streets anymore because the wind will just blow it back down and cover it," said Dan Hansen, a carrier for the U.S. Postal Service in Iowa City. He was bundled up in hand and feet warmers, snow boots and a parka to brave his route. "It'll get worse before it gets better."
In Illinois, fifteen percent of the corn crop is wilting under a layer of snow and may be lost, Reynolds reports.
In Wisconsin, as many as a dozen tractor-trailers were stuck on interstate ramps made impassible by heavy snow where I-39, I-90 and I-94 intersect near Madison, the State Patrol said. Holiday shoppers hoping to use the snow day to get ahead on their gift lists also were out of luck: The city's two largest malls were closed.
The storm felt like a rude surprise after an unseasonably warm and dry November in parts of the region. The massive system is the first major blast of winter weather for many parts of the Midwest.
Reporting live from Minnesota, where the windchill was minus 2 degrees, CBS "Early Show" weather anchor Dave Price said the system started out as a typical winter storm, but the combination of bitter cold arctic air and a fair amount of moisture energized it. Add in a powerful jet stream, and it has been driven across the country at about a 60 mph pace.
"I've been dreading this day," said Kim Brust, shoveling the sidewalk in front of his Minneapolis home before sunrise Wednesday. "I was starting to enjoy the global warming."
Hundreds of flights were canceled or delayed at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago, and only a few were scheduled at Des Moines International Airport.
Blizzard warnings also covered eastern Nebraska, where overnight snowfall reports of 12 inches were common, and parts of Kansas, Illinois and Minnesota. Snow also fell in western and central Michigan. Thousands of power outages were reported in Illinois, Missouri, Michigan and Wisconsin.
In the West, pounded by the storm's rain and snow earlier this week, bitter wind chills as low as 40 below swept across portions of southern Montana. The biting winds also were moving across Wyoming and South Dakota, according to the National Weather Service.
Maine and New Hampshire could see snow accumulations of 6 to 10 inches capped off by rain and sleet in the evening. In northern New York, as much as a foot of snow was expected to accumulate Wednesday and more than 3 feet was expected by the week's end near the Great Lakes.
"It's a monster of a storm," Lee said.
The storm drenched California with rain, blanketed the mountain West with snow and brought 100 mph winds to New Mexico earlier this week. More than 20 inches of snow fell over Flagstaff, Ariz. - more than four times the record of 5 inches set in 1956. Heavy rain also hit some parts of the South, and more than 4 inches reported in spots in New Orleans on Tuesday.
At least 12 deaths were blamed on the weather, including an Arizona hunter who was killed Monday night when a large pine tree snapped and crushed him as he slept in a tent. The driver of a sport utility vehicle that plunged 90 feet off an icy road into the Texas Panhandle's Palo Duro Canyon also died. Three fatal accidents were reported along slippery roads in Missouri, and a Minnesota driver who braked to avoid a stalled vehicle and wound up crashing down an embankment.
Popular on CBSNews.com
- Serena Williams sorry for "what I supposedly said" on rape 71 Comments
- TWA Flight 800 gets another look 17 years later 112 Comments
- TWA Flight 800 disaster - a look back 19 Photos
- 3 football players charged in Naval Academy rape case
- FBI: No sign of Jimmy Hoffa's body in Detroit suburb 59 Comments
- America's endangered historic places 11 Photos
- FBI finds possible remains at gangster's NYC home
- Reporter Michael Hastings dies at 33












And the darn scientists invented the theory of gravity when EVERYONE knows the Flying Spaghetti Monster, who created the earth, is holding us all down with his noodley appendages. Otherwise we would all fly off the earth.
The Great Coastal Gale; Dec 1 - 4, 2007. Quite possibly the worst storm to have hit the Pacific Northwest since 1880. Bottom barometric pressure from this thing was 27.47" Winds up to 138 miles per hour in the Willapa Hills of Washington and up to 14 inches of rain in the first 24 hours. Bremerton had an all time 24 hr. rainfall record of 10.08" This was a monster storm whose influence stretched from Western Montana clear to the International Date Line; from the Bay area all the way to the Alaskan Panhandle. Insured losses in the order of $4 billion.
Hurricane Katrina; Aug 29 to the end of the first week in September, 2005. We all know about the hit N.O. and the Gulf Coast took but this storm's wrath was felt right up the Mississippi Valley northeastward through the Ohio Valley and on into New England and the Maritimes. Katrina's wind and rain caused flooding, property damage and killed people clear up to Nova Scotia. Dead and missing about 2200.
The Superstorm of 1993, March 11 - 15. This nor'easter made the legendary "Blizzard of '88" look like a minor snow squall. Forming in the Gulf of Mexico it joined an unusually potent polar air mass to spin up into one of the most violent non tropical storms of record. This storm had it all; catagory 3 barometric pressures and wind speeds, downpours of tropical intensity, 15 foot storm surges (in Florida) and coastal flooding (elsewhere), record setting snowfalls, and bitterly cold weather not normally seen even in January. Very little U.S. territory east of the Mississippi was unaffected and this thing ended up killing over 300 people in spite of excellent forecast modeling.
The eruption of Mt. St. Helen's; May 18 1980. Not really a storm but prevaling winds dropped up to 6 inches of ash on eastern Washington's prime farm land pretty much ending the growing season. The pall of haze spread out over the entire northern hemisphere droped global temperatures almost as much as Pinutabo did eleven years later.
The Cold January of 1977. Record setting cold waves one right after another for the entire month. Buffalo had one of its snowiest months ever and Homestead, Florida saw it's first and last snowfall. Didn't stick here but did in Ft. Meyers. Below zero temperatures were seen all over the South and the Florida panhandle saw up to 4 inches of snow. New England, the Ohio Valley and the Middle Atlantic had its coldest or second coldest January of record. A thoroughly nasty month that still clings leechlike to lontime residents' memory.
This is another that's shaping up to annoy a large section of the continental U.S. and could adversely impact a lot of people. Stay safe.
Someone go consult the oracle at Goreville!
Had you read any actual information about the phenomenon known as "global warming", you would know that it is only a few degrees in total, but the effect is to increase the energy dynamics of our atmosphere, storms will become gradually more severe, including winter storms, hurricanes, and tornadoes. Droughts will be drier and longer, winters will actually become colder, monsoons will be wetter and more violent.
Climates suitable for various agricultural activities will shift locations, geographical boundaries for animal and insect life will also shift.
It is almost funny how the uneducated cannot see the increase in the intensity of the weather, and will view a more intense winter storm as proof against climate change, when in fact it is exactly what is predicted as part of the process.
It is almost funny that the attitude of the uneducated is that it is OK to continue to pollute our biosphere regardless of the negative consequence. Later, when their descendants are born with deformities, or their area no longer supports necessary agriculture, or cancers and other illnesses begin to take toll, they will claim that it must be the will of their "god". Idjits.
is this global warming? meanwhile in sacramento area, there was snowfall yesterday according to reports and temperatures have dipped into the twenties.
_________________________
They "tricked" the data, ignore the cold, it's warmth turned upside down.