67°F
weather icon Mostly Clear

Storm dumps record-breaking snow on Flagstaff, Arizona

Updated February 22, 2019 - 5:12 pm

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — A winter storm dumped record-breaking amounts of snow in Arizona and forced the closure Friday of roads, schools and government offices across the Southwest.

The storm was pushing through eastern Arizona and heading for New Mexico and Texas after dumping nearly 3 feet of snow Thursday at the Flagstaff airport during the city’s snowiest day on record, and more than 2 feet in Payson, a town that logs that much snow as its yearly average.

Residents were digging out from the weather that the National Weather Service characterized as “not your average” storm.

Chad Williamson cleared his driveway in Flagstaff multiple times over the past two days and watched as icicles hanging from his roof fused together and formed a large spike.

“My biggest thing is our gutters because of the ice,” he said. “I don’t know how they’re going to hold up.”

Roofing companies were busy answering calls to clear roofs to avoid a collapse under the weight of the snow. Officials in Arizona and Durango, Colorado, urged homeowners not to delay the work.

“If snow sits on your roof, when it starts to melt, that’s when it turns to ice and water and gets real heavy,” said Larry Cook, owner of Big Sky Roofing in Flagstaff.

Schools across northern Arizona, southern Nevada and southwestern Colorado were closed — many for a second day — because of threats posed by snow-packed or slick roads. Government offices either closed or delayed the start of their day.

“It is by no means over for us,” meteorologist Mark Stubblefield said in Flagstaff. “It’s still dangerous to travel.”

The freeze-and-thaw cycle after a storm will keep roads icy, and melting snow trapped by a stable air mass will create foggy conditions early next week, the weather service said.

“We’re not looking at warm enough temperatures to melt 40 inches of snow,” meteorologist Dan Leblanc said.

Elsewhere in Arizona

Payson, about 90 miles northeast of Phoenix, essentially was shut down Thursday when state highways in and out of town were closed.

The Walmart in town was reopened Friday for people with emergency needs after being shuttered overnight while crews checked snow accumulation on the roof. The American Red Cross said about 55 stranded travelers slept at a shelter Thursday in Payson.

Farther south, snow accumulated Friday in central and downtown Tucson, surprising many people in the city where snow is rare. Mount Lemmon, a popular hiking spot outside the city, got 38 inches of snow and was closed — even to residents.

A Navajo Nation utility company restored power to 8,000 people after heavy snow and ice built up on electric lines.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
Police clash with students, make arrests at Texas university

Police bulldozed into student protesters at a Texas university, arresting over a dozen people, while new student encampments sprouted at Harvard and other colleges.

Biden meets 4-year-old Abigail Edan, an American who was held hostage by Hamas

White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said the White House meeting with Abigail and her family was “a reminder of the work still to do” to win the release of dozens of people who were taken captive by Hamas terrorists in an Oct. 7 attack on Israel and are still believed to be in captivity in Gaza.

UN calls for investigation of mass graves at Gaza hospitals

A United Nations spokesperson said credible investigators should get access to the graves found at two hospitals in the Gaza Strip that were raided by Israeli troops.