Thanksgiving travel: wicked weather, 'nothing worse than Wednesday'
Send a link to a friend
[November 25, 2019]
By Barbara Goldberg
(Reuters) - A trio of wintry storms headed
across the United States during the busy Thanksgiving travel period
could mean jitters or joy for more than 55 million people on the roads,
rails, waterways and in the air.
The first of three storms predicted for the holiday week was headed for
the U.S. Northeast on Sunday, with overnight accumulations of 4 to 7
inches of snow expected to make driving hazardous in northern New
Hampshire and central and northern Maine, said National Weather Service
meteorologist Patrick Burke at the Weather Prediction Center in College
Park, Maryland.
That storm was expected to end by early Monday.
A second, smaller storm was predicted to aim a snowball at the Midwest
on Tuesday, where 3 to 6 inches of snow was expected to pile up in
Denver, Minneapolis, Omaha, and Des Moines, as well as parts of
Wisconsin.
The third is a massive soggy system set to drench the parched West
Coast, making its way on Wednesday from the Pacific Northwest to
southern California, where it will sit until Friday, lolling like an
over-stuffed holiday guest.
"This is a pretty powerful one, right over the holiday," Burke said.
[to top of second column]
|
This year is expected to mark the second-highest travel volume for
America's busiest holiday, trailing the record set in 2005, said the
American Automobile Association (AAA).
Airports will see 26.8 million passengers traveling through security
screening checkpoints nationwide, said Transportation Security
Administration (TSA) officials.
"Nothing worse than Wednesday," AAA said, expecting a travel crush
on Nov. 27, the day before the federal holiday that has taken place
on the fourth Thursday in November since 1942.
Wicked weather for travelers could mean snowy slopes for outdoor
enthusiasts, however.
"It's going to deliver quite a bit of snow to some of the ski
resorts," Burke said of the storm system headed for the West Coast.
"Once it gets into southern California, it just really sets up there
for a prolonged period of widespread rainfall and heavy mountain
snow affecting not just California but much of the southwestern
U.S., including parts of Arizona, Nevada, Utah."
(Reporting by Barbara Goldberg; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |