Weather
Winter Storm Warning Continues For Metro Denver, Boulder
"If you must travel, carry a shovel," officials said. "Keep an extra flashlight, food, and water in your vehicle in case of an emergency."
The National Weather Service is urging residents in metro Denver and Boulder to stay at home Tuesday, as snow continues to cause accidents on highways and rural roads.
Weather officials have issued a Winter Storm Warning, which remains in effect until 5 p.m. Tuesday.
Up to 16 inches of snow is expected to fall through Tuesday evening, weather officials said. Winds could gust up to 40 mph.
Find out what's happening in Denverfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
"Prepare for a period where travel is impossible," the alert read. "Travel during the period of heavy snow is strongly discouraged. If you must travel, carry a shovel. Keep an extra flashlight, food, and water in your vehicle in case of an emergency."
Many government offices, programs, recreation centers and schools are either operating on a delay or have been closed Tuesday. Hundreds of flights have been either delayed or canceled.
Find out what's happening in Denverfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The heaviest snowfall is hitting areas north and northwest of Denver, weather officials said. Throughout Tuesday morning, the snow storm will continue eastward across the plains and foothills west and southwest of Denver.
"The worst conditions will be Tuesday morning, when very heavy snow is likely around Denver and winds will be increasing on the plains," The National Weather Service alert read. "Winds will increase on Tuesday, with gusts to 30 mph near the mountains and 40 mph on the plains. There will be some drifting of snow in rural areas, and near blizzard conditions are possible east of Fort Morgan and Deer Trail during the day Tuesday."
The National Weather Service said metro Denver and Boulder residents "should have what [they] need for a day at home on Tuesday."
"Travel may become impossible across the I-25 urban
corridor and across the plains from I-70 northward by Tuesday
morning, including unplowed city streets with a foot of new snow
on them."
The City of Lakewood issued an alert with the following traffic precautions:
- Heavy winds and wet snow could cause snow to build up on traffic signals or create power outages for signals. ALWAYS treat a dark traffic signal as a stop sign.
- Accumulated snow can obstruct a traffic signal's indication on one approach, while the other directions are visible. It is important that if motorists cannot see a signal's indication, drivers should assume the signal is RED and STOP before proceeding. The other approaching traffic could see a green signal.
- Drivers should increase visibility to other drivers by turning on their car’s headlights.
Many shoppers were loading up on Thanksgiving groceries while the early stages of the storm hit. Many store shelves were emptied in the process, CBS 4 reported.
The following areas were listed in the storm warning: Arvada, Boulder, Golden, Lakewood, Longmont, Aurora, Brighton, City of Denver, Denver International Airport, Highlands Ranch, Littleton, Parker, Castle Rock, Elbert, Fondis, Kiowa, Larkspur, Briggsdale, Grover, Pawnee Buttes, Raymer, Stoneham, Eaton, Fort Lupton, Greeley, Roggen, Brush, Fort Morgan, Goodrich, Wiggins, Bennett, Byers, Deer Trail, and Leader.
Unfortunately, weather will impact the Thanksgiving holiday travel period. Significant storm moves across Colorado and adjacent states late Monday-Tuesday, so avoid travel if at all possible then. Better travel conditions expected Wed, before another storm moves in Thu-Fri. #COwx pic.twitter.com/jLXqa4mNhS
— NWS Boulder (@NWSBoulder) November 24, 2019
If and when you travel during winter, always take along a winter travel safety kit. Here's a great list of things to include for your family's safety. #COwx https://t.co/Til4II0eLJ pic.twitter.com/JrAqhjfIIC
— NWS Boulder (@NWSBoulder) November 25, 2019
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