As a fierce spring snowstorm headed into a third day of pounding Minnesota, Gov. Tim Walz declared a state of emergency in 64 counties and three tribal nations.
Walz's move Thursday night authorized the National Guard to provide emergency aid in areas struggling with storm and flooding dangers.
In northwestern Minnesota, Marshall County asked the Guard to stand by to rescue residents of Oslo as the north-flowing Red River continued to rise. Along with Freeborn, Mower and Steele counties in southeastern Minnesota, Marshall County also sought Guard aid in rescuing motorists stranded by the storm. Shelters were opening up in many towns in hard-hit areas.
Fierce winds, with gusts up to 50 mph, downed power poles and electrical lines across southern Minnesota. Major power grid damage was reported in Blue Earth, Brown, Cottonwood, Dodge, Faribault, Freeborn, Houston, Jackson, Le Sueur, Lyon, Mower, Murray, Nobles, Olmsted, Pipestone, Rock, Sibley, Steele, Waseca and Yellow Medicine counties, officials said. The Federated Rural Electric cooperative was asking for help from Iowa electricians to repair the heavily damaged power grid in its southern Minnesota territory.
Meanwhile, a blizzard warning remained in effect for much of western Minnesota until 10 a.m. Friday, while a winter storm warning covered a large swath of central and southern Minnesota, including the Twin Cities.
The varied precipitation — snow, ice, sleet, hail and rain — created treacherous travel conditions that spawned hundreds of crashes and multiple highway closures Thursday. Many school districts called off classes, including Minneapolis and St. Paul. At Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, hundreds of flights were delayed or canceled.
The State Patrol said that from 12:30 to 9:30 p.m. Thursday, there were 167 crashes statewide, 16 with injuries, as well as 253 spinouts or vehicles off the road, and 11 jackknifed semis.
On Wednesday afternoon, just as the storm began, a 63-year-old woman from Mora was killed when the car she was driving was hit head-on in a three-vehicle crash on icy Hwy. 23 west of Interstate 35 in Pine County. According to the patrol, Margo R. Hatch died when her 2010 Chevrolet Impala was struck head-on by a 2002 Lexus 300 after the Lexus swerved to avoid rear-ending a third car, a 2008 Impala, that was waiting to make a left turn off Hwy. 23. Hatch's car then swung out, hitting the older Impala.