Gusty winds, blowing snow and icy road conditions continue to make for hazardous travel conditions across the Twin Cities and much of southern Minnesota, even as a powerhouse storm that dropped several inches of snow Dec. 28 begins winding down.
“The worst of it is over,” said Joe Strus, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service in Chanhassen.
But for anybody who needs to get to work or drive for any other reason, “folks need to take it slow this morning,” Strus said, noting that blizzardlike conditions could still make roads slick.
The Weather Service downgraded blizzard and storm warnings to an advisory level until 6 p.m. Monday.
Road conditions remain difficult
Interstate 35 was closed this morning from Albert Lea south to the Iowa border, but reopened about 1 p.m., MnDOT said.
Other roads that had been closed — Hwy. 71 between Sanborn and Redwood Falls and Hwy. 60 between St. James and Windom closed due to “numerous crashes,” — have reopened the Minnesota Department of Transportation said.
No travel advisories posted for much of southern and western Minnesota expired at 10 a.m., MnDOT said.
But don’t expect smooth sailing, the agency warned in a posting on X “Roads are snow and ice covered and visibility remains reduced,” the posting reads.