I-70 West of Denver Closed..several thousand stranded

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Bruce

Guest
2,000 travelers stranded in Colorado

By GEORGE MERRITT, Associated Press Writer 5 minutes ago

DENVER - More than 2,000 travelers were stranded at Red Cross shelters in the Colorado high country Monday as a threat of avalanches closed a stretch of Interstate 70 west of Denver.


Deep snow drifted into more than two dozen narrow ravines in the mountainsides  known as avalanche chutes  raising the danger of potentially deadly snow slides cascading onto I-70.

High winds and blowing snow forced the state to close the highway overnight. There was no word on when the busy thoroughfare through the mountains would reopen.

"I can't even venture a guess right now," Rod Mead, a spokesman for the Colorado Department of Transportation, said Monday.

Crews planned to use low-power explosives Monday morning trying to bring the snow down while the highway was closed, Mead said.

In addition to the avalanche threat, wind-blown snow reduced visibility to nearly zero.

At the 1.7-mile-long Eisenhower Tunnel about 40 miles west of Denver, wind gusts reached 70 mph, keeping crews from clearing the avalanche chutes.

"That is basically the problem we are having right now," said John Nelson, another spokesman for the transportation department. "It's not snowing, it's blowing snow."

P.J. Bailey left Breckenridge to head home on I-70 to Denver around 1 p.m. Sunday, but by nearly four hours later she was no farther than Georgetown, about 35 miles from Breckenridge.

"I was told it would get better, but a mile east of Georgetown, there were whiteout conditions. You couldn't even see the front of your car," said Bailey, 24.

She made her way back to Georgetown for the night.

"You should see this town. There's people stopped everywhere," she said.

Red Cross spokeswoman Melinda Epp said the agency opened seven shelters in schools and recreation centers and most of the 2,000-plus travelers who used them during the night were still there Monday morning. Others relied on the kindness of strangers.

Brian Jerry of Colorado Springs said strangers let him stay in their Silverthorne home Sunday night because motels were full.

"We called the local Quality Inn, and they basically laughed at us," Jerry said Monday.

Jerry, who had been snowboarding at Keystone Resort Sunday when high winds began, said he and his friends found a place to stay through conversations at a restaurant.

"The good will and the bonding together has been outstanding," he said.

Westbound I-70, the main route between Denver and many of the state's major ski resorts, was closed from 10 miles west of Denver to Vail, a distance of about 75 miles. Eastbound lanes were closed from Vail to Georgetown, about 60 miles.

It wasn't clear if the closures would hurt the ski resorts during the lucrative holiday season.

"It's going to be resort-by-resort," said Jennifer Rudolph, a spokeswoman for the industry group Colorado Ski Country USA.

The highway department also closed several other highways around the state Sunday as snow blown by wind gusting to 65 mph reduced visibility to near zero. U.S. 40 over Berthoud Pass, U.S. 6 over Loveland Pass and U.S. 550 over Red Mountain Pass all remained closed Monday.

Steamboat Ski Resort reported 17 inches of fresh snow Sunday.

(This version CORRECTS that the avalanche detonations have not yet begun.)
 
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audrey

Guest
I have friends coming back to Denver from Las vegas I have a feeling that will be in the mess poor dears. I am happy that I got to see them again before the end of the year.
 
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connie seabee

Guest
Lets just hope everyone stranded has a place to stay. I heard that restaurants were staying open to house anyone who needs a place to stay and keep warm.
 
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bostongal

Guest
How terrible for all those people! I hope that everyone is able to find shelter and be safe.

Meg
 
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BostonsJ

Guest
It was absolutely necessary. The highway closed not far from us. We were having ground and snow blizzards with white out conditions. That highway is all switch backs and very steep. Going up is scary coming down in bad weather is frightening beyond belief. Plus, they were afraid of avalanches. The high winds with recent snow ontop of icy snow are prime danger for avalances.


There were over 4 major highways closed at certain points when I went to bed last night and 4 or 5 mountain passes which are above timber line and have razor curves and switch backs. Couple that with no guard rails, being above timberline and white outs, that is a recipe for disaster. The weather is finally calming down here. We are still getting high winds which should end in a few hours. But the blowing snow tonight and high winds were like a snow hurricane. It is biting miserable cold to boot.

I 70 has reopened in both directions but I myself would not want to travel that highway west or east tonight with these very high winds. 70 was closed for 20 hours.

Driving home tonight my car was being blown from side to side and at times I was battling white out conditions. Not fun.

The officials here are very used to doing this and do aid anyone in distress. They open shelters and they try to get everyone off the highway when they do this. Of course there are always those that just ignore the closures and get themselves in a mess.

They probably saved lives by doing this last night. It was just not a night to be on these mountain highways.
 
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reggae

Guest
Sure sounds bad....

Hoping today is better, so DS can get out and head home.
 
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