Story Published:
Dec 25, 2008 at 4:46 PM PST
Story Updated:
Dec 26, 2008 at 6:41 AM PST
PORTLAND, Ore. — The winter weather that has already blanketed much of the state with snow delivered more of the same Thursday.
But not too much more.
The Portland metro area got a Christmas Day dusting, receiving about 2 inches of snow, said Charles Dalton, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Portland.
He said the agency planned to lift a weather winter advisory it had issued for the northern stretch of the Wilamette Valley and predicted that precipitation at lower levels would turn to rain, ending what the National Weather Service said was the heaviest snowfall in Portland since 1980.
"As of right now everything is over with," Dalton said.
He said the same goes for the mountains, where the week's winter storms were expected to tail off. About 4 to 8 inches of snow fell in parts of the North Oregon's Coast Range and between 8 to 10 inches fell in the Cascades.
At lower levels, temperatures are expected to warm and overnight lows are likely to stay above freezing, he said.
For drivers, the warmer weather means clearer roads. Peter Murphy, an Oregon Department of Transportation spokesman, said all roads in the Willamette Valley, as well as mountain passes in the Cascades, were open Christmas Day.
"I wouldn't say it's perfect," he said, "But it all seemed to be in pretty good shape."
Retrieve abandoned vehicles
Vehicles abandoned along major city streets during the last week's storm need to be moved as soon as possible to facilitate plowing, the City of Portland said in a press release.
Vernonia opens emergency shelter
Not everything was in good shape, however. The city of Vernonia, which dealt with devastating floods last December, opened an emergency shelter Thursday because many of its residents are without power.
The shelter is located at the Vernonia Middle School located at 199 Bridge Street. Most of the Vernonia area is without power.
The shelter offers sleeping quarters, lighting, electricity, heat and 3 hot meals per day.
There are a limited number of 4-wheel drive vehicles to help people get to the shelter. Call 1-800-696-7795 for assistance.
PGE crews working 16 hour shifts on Christmas
Elsewhere, Portland General Electric, the state's largest utility, said about 19,000 of its customers were without power as of 4 p.m. Thursday — down from 23,000 who without power at the beginning of the day. Most of its outages were reported in Salem, Silverton and Sheridan, said PGE spokesman Steve Corson.
The day's snowfall kept crews from repairing power outages at higher elevations. PGE said crews would continue to work through the weekend to repair the remaining outages.
Since a week ago, PGE said crews have repaired 370,000 outages and responded to more than 2,200 downed wires.
-- The Associated Press and KATU Web Staff reports