Most of Interstate 70 reopened Saturday after closing Friday east of Aurora to Burlington. Westbound lanes were still closed between Limon and Goodland, Kansas.
DENVER — A major winter storm is bearing down on the Denver metro area, with an historic storm continuing across Colorado’s eastern plains.
The 9NEWS Weather Impact Team issued a Weather Impact Day on Friday and Saturday for the significant snowstorm.
Highways began reopening across the eastern Colorado plains on Saturday, but westbound lanes of Interstate 70 were still closed between Deer Trail and Goodland, Kansas.
Hundreds of schools were closed across Colorado on Friday, including some of the largest school districts in the Denver area, such as Denver Public Schools, Aurora, Cherry Creek, Douglas County and Jeffco Public Schools.
Colorado Highway Road Closures
These major highways and interstates were closed as of 1 p.m. Saturday, according to CDOT:
- I-70 Westbound Goodland Kansas to Deer Trail
- US 6 Eastbound/Westbound Loveland Pass
- US 24 Eastbound/Westbound Calhan to Limon
- US 24 Eastbound/Westbound Seibert to Burlington
- US 40 Westbound Limon to Kit Carson
- US 160 Eastbound/Westbound from US 350 Junction to CO 389 Junction
- US 160 Eastbound/Westbound from Kim to US 385 Junction
- US 287 Northbound from Wiley to Kit Carson
- CO 10 Eastbound/Westbound from Walsenburg to La Junta
- CO 59 Northbound/Southbound from Cope to Kit Carson
- CO 71 Northbound/Southbound from Last Chance to Punkin Center
- CO 86 Eastbound/Westbound from Elizabeth to I-70
- CO 94 Eastbound/Westbound from El Paso County line to US 40/287 Junction
- CO 101 Northbound/ Southbound from Las Animas to Toonerville
- CO 109 Northbound/Southbound from La Junta to Kim
- CO 389 Northbound/Southbound from New Mexico state line to US 160 Junction
CDOT plow crews are in full shift and will be plowing and treating state-maintained roads throughout the storm and afterward as necessary.
Even with plowing, pretreatment and deicing, CDOT said roads are slick, particularly on bridges, overpasses and shady areas.
If you have to be out, take it slow, keep a safe distance behind the vehicle in front of you, stay well behind plows, do not pass plows and give extra time.
Know before you go and check out COtrip.org for the latest road conditions.
Colorado chain and traction laws
The CDOT urged travelers to be aware of chain and traction law codes before heading out on the roadway:
- Code 18/Commercial Chain Law: Commercial vehicles and trucks must have chains. Vehicles without chains can often lose traction, causing traffic delays and sometimes road closures. For the safety of the traveling public, it’s critical to use chains to comply with Colorado’s chain law.
- Code 15/Passenger Traction Law: All passenger vehicles must have appropriate all-weather tires with 3/16-inch depth. Vehicles must have one of the following: winter tires, tires with mud/snow (M+S) designation, chains or alternative traction devices such as an autosock. 4WD and AWD vehicles must have winter tires or all-weather tires.
- Code 16/Passenger Chain Law: All passenger vehicles need chains, except for 4WD and AWD vehicles with all-weather tires with 3/16-inch tread depth.
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