SEATTLE (AP) -- A vicious storm struck the Pacific Northwest and other western states at the start of the holiday travel season, dumping heavy snow on roads, knocking out power to tens of thousands of people and causing a cargo plane to overshoot its runway in Seattle.
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At least three deaths have been blamed on the storm, including a man struck and killed outside his car Monday night on snowy Interstate 5 in Tacoma. Washington State Patrol Trooper Brandy Kessler said it wasn't clear whether the man was chaining up his car or pushing it when he was hit.
Blowing snow, slick roads and temperatures in the mid-20s turned the Monday evening commute in the Puget Sound region into an hours-long slog - for those who made it home. Some commuters gave up after more than four hours and returned to their Seattle offices; others reported they were still stuck in traffic more than five hours after leaving work.
Snow and blizzard warnings across Washington were ending Tuesday morning, but frigid air will drop Tuesday night to lows into the single digits in Western Washington and as much as 15 degrees below zero in Eastern Washington, the National Weather Service said.
Elsewhere in the West, the weather service issued a blizzard warning for Utah amid forecasts of strong winds, heavy snow and possible whiteout conditions Tuesday night. Searchers will brave an icy blast of winter when they resume the search of a rugged canyon near Moab for a man believed to have shot a Utah park ranger last week.
Temperatures dipped to freezing in the Portland, Ore., area on Monday as homeless people lined up at emergency warming shelters.
Portland got a dusting of snow Monday evening but the outlook for Tuesday was just chilly - with a forecast high of 30 degrees, National Weather Service meteorologist Russ Willis said.
Oregon State Police said heavy snow, high winds and limited visibility caused numerous commercial trucks to jackknife Monday in the area around Mount Hood. KGW-TV said sections of Oregon Highway 26 were closed intermittently.
Troopers also reported at least a dozen crashes Monday on Santiam Pass in Oregon's central Cascades.
Forecasters predict up to 14 inches of snow in northcentral Idaho as the powerful storm closed schools and shut down sections of highways. The Idaho State Police says all roads in Bingham County in eastern Idaho are closed and the agency is urging motorists across the state to stay off roads slick with ice and snow.
At Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, a China Airlines Boeing 747 cargo plane landing in snowy conditions Monday afternoon overshot its runway stopping point. No injuries were reported, airport spokeswoman Terri-Ann Betancourt said. The plane overshot the runway's designated stopping point by about 100 feet but still stopped on concrete in the runway's safety area, she said.
A record 2.5 inches of snow fell at Sea-Tac Airport on Monday, the Weather Service said. The old record for the date was 1.5 inches set in 1977.
Sea-Tac Airport was keeping runways and taxiways clear, said spokesman Perry Cooper.
"It's nothing we can't handle," he said. "We've been through this before."
Many school districts, including Seattle, announced classes would be canceled Tuesday. The Weather Service in Spokane posted a rare blizzard warning until 10 a.m. Tuesday - the first such warning the office had issued since it opened in the mid-1990s.
Transportation Department sanding trucks were blocked overnight in many parts of the Seattle area by cars that were abandoned or wrecked. Drivers and bus riders were urged to stay home Tuesday until conditions improve, and 14 bus routes were canceled due to icy roads and abandoned cars.
Winds gusting to 65 mph made matters worst by cutting off power Monday for tens of thousands of utility customers in Western Washington. Puget Sound Energy said most of its 90,000 outages were in Kitsap County. That number was down to 64,000 by 6 a.m. Tuesday, but spokeswoman Gretchen Aliabadi couldn't say when everyone would have their power turned back on.
Blowing and drifting snow was been reported across much of Eastern Washington's Columbia Basin, with numerous road closures.
Two people were killed Monday when the car they were in slid on a snowy road at Cowiche near Yakima and collided with another car, the State Patrol said. In Tacoma, a Pierce County Transit bus slid down a steep hill and overturned with about 20 people were aboard on Monday. Twelve were taken to hospitals, but no serious injuries were reported.
Temperatures should start to moderate Wednesday and there's a chance of rain on Thanksgiving Day in Western Washington, although it could start as snow. Eastern Washington temperatures are forecast to remain well below freezing into the weekend, forecasters said.
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Associated Press photographer Ted Warren in Tacoma and writers Phuong Le and Donna Gordon Blankinship in Seattle and Nicholas K. Geranios in Spokane contributed to this report.