
""We are anticipating some pretty big snows over the next 24 hours, especially across east central Minnesota to northern Wisconsin to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. A lot of those places will have 6-12 inches," NWS Lead Forecaster Bob Oravec told NPR on Sunday."
""We tend to heed the advice of our weather forecasters and prepare to hunker down as needed," Schloegel wrote. "As far as taking care of the snow, our extremely dedicated public works and MDOT crews do a great job taking care of our residents, they are true professionals. Roads are usually back to normal within 24 [hours].""
A rapidly intensifying cyclone is fueling severe weather across the United States, producing heavy snow, blizzard conditions, extreme cold, and damaging winds from Montana east to Maine and from Texas north to Pennsylvania. More than eight million people are under winter storm warnings and nearly two million are under blizzard warnings. An arctic front clashing with warm air is expected to rapidly deepen into a bomb cyclone over the Midwest and Great Lakes through Monday. Forecasts call for 6–12 inches across east central Minnesota into northern Wisconsin and Michigan's Upper Peninsula, with localized foot-plus totals along Lake Superior and winds of 40–65 mph, creating potential power outages and near-zero visibility in some areas.
Read at www.npr.org
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