Crashes and flight delays were accumulating Sunday as a major winter storm swept through Minnesota and Wisconsin, bringing “dangerous, potentially life-threatening travel conditions” at the end of the holiday weekend, weather forecasters said.
The National Weather Service warned travelers about arctic air moving into the Plains on Sunday that would be followed by “a potent winter storm from the upper Midwest to the Great Lakes.”
That storm was expected to bring heavy snow and blizzard conditions to the region. Blizzard warnings were posted in southern and western parts of the state.
The weather service in Minnesota said that a band of at least 10 inches of snow was expected to develop across eastern Minnesota and western Wisconsin.
By 8:30 a.m. local time Sunday, roads across western Minnesota were blanketed with snow and visibility was reduced to a half-mile or less, said the weather service, which shared images of nearly whiteout conditions on roads.
The dangerous conditions were expected Sunday through early Monday, the weather service said on social media, advising that residents not travel across the south central and southwest portions of Minnesota.
The Federal Aviation Administration announced a ground delay at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport because of the weather. Two inches of snow had fallen at the airport by noon Sunday. The airport had at least 200 delayed and 67 canceled flights as of Sunday afternoon.
Reports of crashes and spinouts in the state began piling up starting early Sunday. The Minnesota State Patrol reported at least 12 crashes resulting in injuries and at least five spinouts through Sunday afternoon.
Portions of Interstate 35, which runs north-south in the state, were closed in the afternoon because of the numerous crashes, the weather service said.
“Please delay or cancel travel plans until the storm has passed,” the State Patrol said.
The poor weather settled in as travelers were beginning to return home after the long holiday weekend.
As of Sunday afternoon, there were more than 24,000 delayed flights and more than 1,200 canceled flights across the country, according to the flight-tracking site FlightAware.
About 2.9 million people were expected to travel Sunday, according to the Transportation Security Administration.
Freezing rain ahead of a warm front was forecast for the Northeast on Sunday and then expected to move east through New England on Sunday evening.
A mix of snow, sleet and freezing rain will most likely affect northern New England before warmer air changes the wintry mix to all rain later Monday, the weather service said.
Portions of Rhode Island and Massachusetts could get 0.1 to 0.2 inches of ice while parts of southern New Hampshire may get as much as a half-inch through Monday morning, forecasters said.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
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