Midwest spring transforms into winter

Few signs of spring are being found in parts of the Midwest as a snowstorm tracked mostly along Interstate 70, bringing heavy snow and high winds.

The National Weather Service said parts of Colorado and northwest Kansas saw 10 to 15 inches of snow Saturday, and southwestern Nebraska had up to 7 inches. Winds gusting at speeds of up to 45 mph created snow drifts of 2 to 3 feet in the three states, said Ryan Husted, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Goodland, Kan.

“We have pretty much cleared out. Sunny skies. It’s starting to melt a little bit,” Husted said Sunday.

Points eastward weren’t as lucky as the system moved on. Winter storm warnings and advisories were issued for Sunday and today as far east as Pennsylvania.

The storm dumped 7 to 9 inches of snow from eastern Kansas into central Missouri before tapering off Sunday morning, said Dan Hawblitzel, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in suburban Kansas City. In the mid-Missouri town of Columbia, TV station KOMU was briefly evacuated Sunday morning because of high winds and a heavy buildup of snow on the broadcast tower next to the building.

But there was no cause for college basketball fans in Kansas City to be concerned, as the snow didn’t affect the NCAA men’s tournament schedule.

“The snow is not an issue,” said Wynn Butler, 62, of Manhattan, Kan., who was in town with his daughter, a University of Kansas graduate, to watch her alma mater take on North Carolina.

He said his car is in a parking garage, and he can walk from his hotel to the Sprint Center. Butler also figures the roads will be clear before they leave after the game, which was scheduled to start late Sunday afternoon.

“We are right in between the bad weather,” he said.

Snow began to fall in earnest in St. Louis and western Illinois on Sunday morning.

“The snow intensity is pretty heavy, so the visibility is low,” said Todd Waelterman, director of the City of St. Louis Streets Department. “So we’ve asked people to stay off the road and let our plows do their job. And people seem to be heeding that warning.”

St. Louis was expecting between 8 to 10 inches of snow, Hawblitzel said, while western and central Illinois could get 6 to 9 inches. The storm also was brushing northern Oklahoma and Arkansas.

Indiana was bracing for 6 to 10 inches of snow as the storm moved east late Sunday, and parts of Ohio could see between 5 to 9 inches by this morning.

The storm was expected to weaken as it moved into Pennsylvania late Sunday and into today, with totals ranging from 3 to 8 inches. Before it exits off the coast of New Jersey tonight, the storm could leave 1 to 3 inches in southern New York and New Jersey.

“It’s definitely a wide-hitting system,” Hawblitzel said.