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Get out your snow shovel

City closes Eighth Avenue hill to Fort Lewis College

After a series of small storms in Durango, the town may see its biggest so far this winter from a storm that moved into the area Monday afternoon.

By 7 p.m. Monday, the Colorado Department of Transportation was already reporting that Coal Bank, Molas and Red Mountain passes were icy and snowpacked.

Just before 8 p.m. Monday, Fort Lewis College closed the front hill access on East Eighth Avenue to the school. The Emergency Services Dispatch Center said it anticipated the access will be closed at least through the night.

Area law-enforcement agencies were responding to several reports of cars sliding off roads as of 8:30 p.m. Monday.

Forecasters at the Grand Junction office of the National Weather Service are predicting a 90 percent chance of snowfall, with 5 to 9 inches overnight Monday and another 3 to 5 inches possible Tuesday. That means more than a foot of snow is possible in town by Tuesday afternoon.

All of Southwest Colorado is under a winter storm warning until 6 p.m. Tuesday.

“How much snow falls in different areas will largely be influenced by topography,” said John Kyle, data acquisitions program manager for the weather service. “The higher up you go, the better chance there will be for a bigger snow.”

Altitudes above 7,000 feet may see as much as 18 inches from the storm, the weather service said.

The Colorado Avalanche Information Center said avalanche conditions were moderate in the southern San Juan Mountains Monday, but it expected the danger to rise with the storm.

We’re still not technically in the El Niño weather pattern that was predicted for this winter, Kyle said.

“You’re having El Niño-like symptoms,” he said, “unlike the last two winters, with northern latitude signatures. This one’s coming off the Pacific Northwest.”

The storm may linger into early Wednesday, Kyle said, but then it appears the area will return to drier weather until Sunday evening.

abutler@durangoherald.com

Weather information

The Colorado Department of Transportation reminds drivers to check for updated weather information:

Visit www.cotrip.org for real-time road conditions, highway closures, average speeds, photos, live cameras streaming traffic, trucking information and more.

Call 511 to listen to recorded information about road conditions, projected trip travel times and trucker information.

Receive free email/text alerts at www.coloradodot.info by clicking the green cellphone icon and choose from a list of subscription options.

Follow @coloradodot on Twitter for traveler information and other news.

Like CDOT at www.facebook.com/coloradodot and receive major updates regarding traveler information and other CDOT news.

Visit www.coloradodot.info/travel/winter-driving to get information about what to keep in a vehicle during the winter, how to safely pass a snowplow, commercial vehicle requirements, seasonal closures, snow removal and avalanche control.

Herald Staff



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