SIDNEY - Snow returns across the Nebraska Panhandle, southeast Wyoming and northeast Colorado late Tuesday afternoon through Wednesday night, according to the National Weather Service office in Cheyenne. 

The weather service says those with travel plans over the next couple of days should be prepared for snow and reduced visibilities. This storm system will generally be a prolonged light to moderate snow event with some periods of heavier snowfall possible.

Southern Laramie County in southeast Wyoming, where a winter storm warning is in place, could see up to six or more inches of snow. Sidney, Bridgeport, Torrington, Sterling and Scottsbluff are forecast for two to five inches of snow, while Kimball and Pine Bluffs could receive three to six inches.

Wind gusts up to 25 mph on Wednesday could lead to some modest blowing and drifting snow. 

A winter weather advisory is in effect from 5 p.m. Tuesday to 2 a.m. Thursday for Cheyenne, Kimball, Banner, Scotts Bluff and south Sioux County in the Nebraska Panhandle, Goshen and Laramie Counties in southeast Wyoming, and Logan and Sedgwick Counties in northeast Colorado. 

Winter storm to bring snow, ice across wide swath of US

By: The Associated Press

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — A major winter storm was expected to affect a huge swath of the United States beginning Tuesday, with heavy snow starting in the Rockies and freezing rain as far south as Texas before it drops snow and ice on the Midwest.

The forecast comes nearly a year after a catastrophic winter storm devastated Texas' power grid, causing hundreds of deaths. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott planned a briefing Tuesday on the state's readiness, though the forecast this week does not call for prolonged, widespread frigid temperatures like the February 2021 storm had.

Winter storm watches and warnings covered a wide swath of the country from El Paso, Texas, through the Midwest and parts of the Northeast to Burlington, Vermont. The storm follows a vicious nor’easter that brought blizzard conditions to many parts of the East Coast.

During the multiday storm this week, some areas may see a mix of rain and freezing rain before it changes to snow. "It will be a very messy system and will make travel very difficult,” said Marty Rausch, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in College Park, Maryland.

The National Weather Service said 6 to 12 inches (15 to 30 centimeters) of snow was expected by Thursday morning in parts of the Rockies and Midwest, while heavy ice is likely from Texas through the Ohio Valley.

On Wednesday and Thursday, the weather service said 8 to 14 inches (20 to 36 centimeters) of snow was possible in parts of Michigan, including Detroit. From Wednesday through Friday morning, 9 to 14 (23 to 36 centimeters) inches of snow was forecast in northwestern Ohio.

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