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December 31, 2005

Cloudy and dreary—but it could be worse

When damp and mild air rolls across Chicagoland at this time of the year, it is usually attended by extensive cloudiness, fog and rain. It’s the price we pay when winter temperatures climb 10-15 degrees above normal.
History tells us that Chicago’s readings climb into the 40s on only about one day in four during the first week of January, and so Sunday’s and Monday’s highs in the low and mid 40s constitute an early-January bargain. But it won’t last.
Cold air returns in earnest later this week, and temperatures plunge 30 degrees to levels that will run as far below normal by Saturday as they are above normal today.
Elsewhere, the weather is causing life-threatening troubles ranging from flooding rains (and massive mountain snows) across California, Oregon and Nevada to warm, desiccating winds across Texas and Oklahoma that have set the stage for grassland fire emergencies.

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NEW YEAR’S DAY AT CHICAGO

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U.S. PRECIPITATION

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December 30, 2005

Continued mild at Chicago into late next week

Chicago’s ongoing mild spell was interrupted Friday afternoon as rain changed to snow for a few hours. By 8:00 p.m., O’Hare Airport had measured 0.2 inches, and Midway 0.3 inches. These meager sums did not stick as temperatures held above freezing.
Farther north, nearly a foot was expected in Minnesota and Wisconsin around Lake Superior. The storm causing the weather passed just north of Chicago. In its wake, Saturday’s temperatures will plunge across Chicagoland but remain above normal—especially the overnight lows.
Mild weather returns Sunday to greet the new year, but the fast-track of frontal passage every two days continues, with rain returning by Sunday night into Monday, and again Tuesday night into Wednesday. Thereafter, the jet stream buckles and divides the country in two. In the West, the series of pounding Pacific storms ends, while more normal winter temperatures return east of the Rockies.

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