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Winter Weather Havoc Is Expected to Make a Cross-Country Run - The New York Times

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A “major storm system” is forecast to rumble across the U.S., bringing feet of snow to the West, blizzard conditions in the Northern Plains and tornadoes across the South, forecasters say.

A major storm system that could bring multiple feet of snow across the West and blizzard conditions to the Northern Plains approached the West Coast on Friday evening, the start of a slow cross-country journey lasting all week and into the following weekend, forecasters said on Saturday.

The storm system traveled across the Northern Pacific on Friday and will push into California over the weekend, forecasters with the Weather Prediction Center of the National Weather Service said on Saturday. The storm will continue to bring mountain snow and coastal rain to the West.

Wintry precipitation will extend from the Great Lakes region into the Northeast on Sunday. Heavy rainfall and thunderstorms could reach the South.

Computer modeling has given forecasters confidence in predicting the types of risks that will happen at the beginning of the week as the storm sweeps across the central United States. Here is what forecasters believe is likely to happen.

The storm system began to move ashore Friday evening, bringing strong winds to the California coast. Heavy rain in the lower elevations could lead to flooding.

In the mountains, though, that moisture has started to fall as heavy snow.

“The impacts will be widespread from north to south with numerous winter weather-related advisories in effect,” the Weather Prediction Center said on Saturday, adding that “the heaviest snowfall is expected for the Sierra Nevada,” with several feet expected.

Forecasters predicted “extreme impacts” — the gravest warning on the Weather Service’s winter storm severity scale — across the Sierra Nevada this weekend.

In the Sierra mountain region, snow was falling at a rate of six inches per hour as of Saturday afternoon, according to the California Department of Transportation. “Travel is difficult to impossible with whiteout conditions,” the department said on Twitter.

A portion of Interstate 80 near the Sierra Nevada was shut down on Saturday afternoon because of blowing snow, which created “near-zero visibility” on the roads, the Transportation Department said on Twitter. After reports of “multiple vehicle spinouts,” the department said drivers were asked to turn around and that there was no estimate for when the highway would reopen.

More than five feet of snow is expected in parts of the Sierra Nevada, forecasters at the Prediction Center wrote.

As this low-pressure system moves ashore, it will tap into an atmospheric river — an area of moisture that flows through the sky like a river at a level of the atmosphere near where planes fly. The combination will allow for the snowfall total to reach one to three feet across much of the higher terrain.

“We are increasingly confident that we will be dealing with a pretty significant Northern Plains blizzard next week,” said Greg Carbin, the chief of forecast operations for the Weather Prediction Center.

The system will move out of the Rockies and begin to strengthen, increasing the chance of heavy snow and very strong winds through Wednesday across the Northern Plains. The wintry blast is possible from Colorado, including Denver, and northeast across the Northern Plains. Across the Dakotas, at least a foot is likely, Mr. Carbin said.

“The potential does exist there for some really impressive amounts,” he added, as he expects this storm system will most likely slow down.

Snow in the mountains of the Central Rockies and Arizona could reach a foot by Sunday night.

It looks highly likely that severe storms, possibly capable of producing tornadoes, will form on Tuesday across an area from eastern Texas across Arkansas, Louisiana and much of Mississippi, said Bill Bunting, the chief of forecast operations at the Storm Prediction Center.

“Most fall and winter severe weather events typically have several features in common, including a low-pressure system near or north of the area of concern, a southerly flow of increasingly moist air from the Gulf of Mexico moving northward prior to the event and a cold front moving east towards the area,” Mr. Bunting explained.

“A similar setup is expected early next week,” he said, “which gives us confidence regarding the potential for a focused area of severe thunderstorms and possibly tornadoes.”

Tornadoes are not uncommon this time of year, but they are less likely than in the spring and early summer.

“We average about four days in December per year with at least one EF1” — rated on a 0-to-5 scale of tornado damage — “or stronger tornado,” said Harold Brooks, a senior scientist with the National Severe Storms Laboratory, part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. “There are about 100 days with an EF1 or stronger tornado during the year.” 

Severe winter storms like the ones predicted next week can be more dangerous than ones that form during peak severe weather season, in May and June.

“Because days are shorter,” Mr. Brooks explained, “they’re more likely to occur after dark,” he said of the storms. This “makes them more dangerous” because people in harm’s way cannot spot them as they approach, he said.

“They also are more likely to occur in the mid-South and southeastern United States, which have greater rural population density than the Plains and have a higher fraction of manufactured housing and poverty,” he added. “Thus, the impacts can be greater.”

Some snow is expected for southern New England, the interior Northeast and the central Appalachians on Sunday, forecasters said on Saturday.

“Moderate snow totals between 3-4 inches are possible inland for higher elevation locations like the Berkshires and Catskills, and 1-2 inches are possible further south into central Pennsylvania,” the forecast said.

Rain and snow are expected across interior northeastern New Jersey, the lower Hudson Valley and southern Connecticut by Sunday night. New York City could see snow on Thursday.

April Rubin and Eduardo Medina contributed reporting.

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