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Tough 24 Hours: Snowy Drive Triggers Several Crashes



(WBEN) The Lake Effect snow machine has made for horrible driving conditions, especially along the Thruway in Chautauqua County.

"We've had a foot of snow in Ripley, ten inches in Perrysburg. From what we had last night, we can add in half that much again or more on top. It has just been snowing constantly in that area all night long," says Meteorologist Bill Hibbert at the National Weather Service.

Tuesday morning the visibility and winds kept several tractor trailers at the side of the Thruway in Ripley, waiting for better driving conditions. While many could be seen waiting before sunrise, a few remained in place even as late as 10 am (pictured above)

On the evening commute Monday there were similar problems.  The 90 Westbound was blocked for a couple of hours Monday following an accident that involved six vehicles.

The Thruway Authority says a tractor trailer and five passenger vehicles were involved in the crash at approx. 4 pm Monday. Traffic was diverted at the Eden-Angola exit. That led to congestion all the way back to the Lackawanna toll barrier.


AP Photo

(AP)  Blowing snow and slick roadways in various parts of the state on Monday set off multiple highway pileups, including one outside Cincinnati involving at least 86 vehicles that left a 12-year-old girl dead.

The crash on Interstate 275 near the Cincinnati suburb of Colerain Township was one of at least four pileups that snared dozens of vehicles. Officers were called to the scene shortly after 11:30 a.m. and discovered multiple chain-reaction collisions.

The 12-year-old girl had gotten out of a damaged vehicle and was standing in the median near a cable barrier, a type of fencing made of rope-like steel wire cables, the Hamilton County sheriff's office said. Another vehicle hit the barrier, snapping a cable, which then struck the girl and killed her, office spokesman Jim Knapp said.

At least 20 people were taken to hospitals, though their injuries were not expected to be life-threatening, the office said.

The interstate was shut down for hours with wreckage strewn across it, authorities said.

"It was just chaos, absolute chaos," Hamilton County sheriff's office Lt. Tory Smith told The Cincinnati Enquirer.

The sheriff's office said the crash remained under investigation, but it noted that inclement weather was a factor. Snow had been accumulating on the roadway, and there were reports of ice. Visibility was poor.

Parts of the state saw scattered snow showers on Monday, with isolated pockets of heavier snowfall.

As many as 50 vehicles were in a pileup on I-75, between Middletown and Monroe, in southwest Ohio. A dispatcher with the State Highway Patrol said minor injuries were reported in the accident, which occurred just before noon.

State Highway Patrol Sgt. James Russell told The Middleton Journal that snow falling at the time of the pileup caused "white-out conditions" and possibly triggered the first drivers to lose control and start the crash.

Witness Luke Stevens, of Van Wert, told the newspaper he was in a vehicle at the front of the pileup.

"It was complete ice all over the highway," he said.

Four semitrailers and about 20 cars were involved in an afternoon pileup on I-71 near Mansfield, the state patrol said. And lanes of I-270 were closed temporarily following a multi-vehicle crash near Columbus.


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