Blizzard Disrupts Travel in Colorado

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SOURCE: ABC News
http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory?id=658046

Blizzard Disrupts Travel in Colorado

Blizzard Forces Cancellation of Flights in Colorado; 5-10 Inches 
Forecast for Denver

By ROBERT WELLER
The Associated Press

Apr. 10, 2005 - Hundreds of travelers were stranded at the Denver 
airport and along highways Sunday as a blizzard blew across eastern 
Colorado with wet, heavy snow.

Seven to 10 inches of snow was forecast in Denver and up to 30 inches 
was possible in the foothills west of Denver, Colorado Springs and 
Boulder, the National Weather Service said.

"I can see just across the street and that's it," Heath Vansickler said 
at the Country Store in Palm Lake, 45 miles south of Denver.

Fat, moisture-laden snowflakes were blown sideways by wind gusting to 30 
mph. Xcel Energy reported that 10,000 customers were without power in 
the heavily populated Front Range region.

All airlines canceled departing flights from Denver International 
Airport during the morning, airport spokeswoman Laura Jackson said. 
United Airlines, the biggest carrier at the airport, canceled all of its 
flights for the whole day, she said.

Planes on the ground were icing up faster than they could be cleaned, 
said Joe Hodas of Frontier Airlines, which had planes landing but not 
taking off.

Hundreds of people were stranded at the airport, many stretching out on 
couches and the floor, using coats for pillows, or waiting in 
slow-moving lines at fast-food restaurants in the terminal.

"I need a drink and the lines are an hour-long to get one," passenger 
Brandi Hoenig said.

She and her husband, Jim, were on their way home to Cocoa, Fla., after a 
honeymoon ski trip, but their flight was canceled and all nearby hotels 
were filled. "We can't get a flight until Tuesday afternoon," Jim Hoenig 
said.

Alister Cleland and his family were stuck at the airport on their way 
home to Durham, England, after a week at the Beaver Creek ski resort. 
"We liked the snow there, but there's too much here," he said.

Whiteout conditions shut down a 16-mile stretch of heavily traveled 
Interstate 25 between Denver and Colorado Springs, 60 miles to the 
south. I-70 was closed in both directions in the Denver area. The state 
Department of Transportation said crews reported whiteout conditions on 
Interstate 76 near the Nebraska state line.

About 300 truckers waited out the storm at the TA Truck Stop along I-70 
in Wheat Ridge, said general manager Richard Lemm.

"It looks like they're going to be here most of the day. There are a lot 
more coming in than going out," Lemm said.

Three state-run prisons in Denver were also closed to visitors by 
weather for the first time ever, said Alison Morgan, spokeswoman for the 
state corrections department.

The storm, which struck western Colorado on Saturday, was expected to 
blow out of the area late Sunday, mostly turning to rain over the Plains.

A similar storm system in March 2003 paralyzed much of the greater 
Denver area with 3 feet of wet, slushy snow that destroyed trees and 
damaged homes.

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