Major snowstorm closes airport, strands travelers



The storm also hit Wyoming, Nebraska, Kansas, New Mexico and Texas.
DENVER (AP) -- A major snowstorm blew across Colorado toward the Plains on Wednesday, dumping more than a foot of snow in some places and forcing the airport to close, stranding thousands of holiday travelers. Authorities at times shut down major highways in parts of six states.
The National Weather Service posted blizzard warnings for most of eastern Colorado and adjoining sections of Nebraska and Kansas. A day earlier, the storm had pummeled New Mexico with up to a foot of snow.
As much as 20 inches of snow was forecast in Denver, where all nonessential municipal offices were closed early. Snow was predicted to fall through this morning.
The storm struck Denver just as the morning commute was starting.
"I'm going to grab my computer, talk to my boss and go back home," Jennifer Robinson said after driving about 20 miles from her home in Boulder to her sales job in downtown Denver. "I'm not going to take a risk and get stuck in Denver."
Stranded in airport
Denver International Airport closed in midafternoon and was expected to remain so until at least this evening, said spokesman Steve Snyder. More than 1,000 flights were canceled through today, and as many as 3,000 people were stranded at the airport.
Stranded travelers sprawled on benches and floors, or stood in long lines at ticket counters trying to make new reservations.
"I'm trying to book another flight, but I'll probably be spending the night at the airport," said Michael Heitc, 54, of Denver, who was trying to get to Oregon to visit relatives for the holidays.
Colorado Gov. Bill Owens declared a state of emergency and activated the National Guard in case stranded motorists needed to be rescued.
Authorities closed portions of interstate highways in Wyoming, Nebraska, Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico and Texas throughout the day, including nearly all of Interstate 25 in Colorado, the state's busiest north-south route.
"They pulled everyone off the highway," said Leon Medina, manager of a truck stop on Interstate 25 in Walsenburg, about 130 miles south of Denver. "Cars are all around the building. Trucks are all over, trucks and cars pulled into ditches."
Scores of schools were closed, and the NBA's Denver Nuggets canceled their game Wednesday night against the Phoenix Suns.
Travelers stalled by the closures filled Kansas motels, said Stan Whitley, a spokesman for the state Department of Transportation.
Good skiing
The lumbering storm dropped more than a foot of snow in Colorado's southwestern mountains Tuesday, with 19 inches at the Wolf Creek ski area and 17 at Durango Mountain Resort.
"We've been waiting for a big storm to hit, so this was the best early Christmas present," Durango Mountain Resort spokeswoman Loryn Kasten said.
Winter storm or blizzard warnings were in effect for much of Nebraska, with up to 12 inches of snow expected by this morning. Rain spread across much of the rest of the Plains.
Roads around New Mexico were still snow-packed and icy Wednesday. Numerous schools opened late or remained closed. Los Alamos National Laboratory was closed for the day.
Up to a foot of snow fell at higher elevations of northwest and west-central New Mexico on Tuesday, and snow and sleet closed sections of I-40 for a time across eastern New Mexico and in the Texas Panhandle. Albuquerque International Airport was closed for several hours Tuesday as snow covered runways.
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