Governor
J.B. Pritzker said wind chill could drive temperatures to -55 degrees
Fahrenheit in northern Illinois on Tuesday evening, capable of causing
frostbite in a matter of minutes.
"This
is a potentially historic winter storm that will bring extreme cold to our
state and all Illinoisans must prepare," Pritzker said in a written
statement released by his office."Our administration is putting into place
an Emergency Preparedness Plan with key state agencies as well as warning
residents about these life-threatening conditions."
The
governor of Illinois on Monday issued an emergency preparedness plan ahead of a
"historic" polar vortex of cold air and wind descending on much of
the U.S., warning residents that temperatures were likely to plunge well below
zero.
The
so-called polar vortex weather system was expected to send frigid winds that
circulate around the North Pole across much of the United States from the
Dakotas through New England, National Weather Service meteorologist Brian
Hurley said.
"If
you live up in the Arctic Circle, you'd say this is pretty normal. When it's
actually brought down to this level, that's when you know it's something
serious," Hurley said.
Blizzard
conditions were predicted across parts of the western Ohio Valley and snow was
expected through Wednesday from the Great Lakes region into New England.
Snowfall
was also expected in the Dakotas, Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minnesota; and in
Central Michigan, where a foot (30 cm) or more of snow is expected, the weather
service said.
Chicago
will take the main brunt of the super cold weather, with widespread heavy snow
already affecting the area on Monday, the weather service said on Twitter.
Wind
chills as low as -50 F (-46C) were also expected by Tuesday evening through
Thursday morning.
The
service's Des Moines, Iowa, branch said "dangerous, life-threatening cold
air" will hit the Midwestern state from Tuesday morning through Friday
morning, with wind chill values on Wednesday likely to range from minus 45
Fahrenheit (minus 43 C) to minus 55 Fahrenheit (minus 48 C) across the northern
part of the state.
Nearly
2,300 U.S. flights had been canceled and another 11,800 delayed as of Monday
evening, many attributed to the storm.
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