A winter weather advisory is in effect for several Chicago-area counties Wednesday, warning of the potential for strong winds and blowing snow that could make travel hazardous. The National Weather Service has issued a winter weather advisory for most of northern Illinois and parts of northwest Indiana, as wind gusts in excess of 40 miles per hour could cause blowing and drifting snow across the area through Wednesday evening. The alert described “near ground blizzard” conditions as being likely with the winds, which will shift out of the west and will impact north-south roadways. The advisory is in effect for McHenry, Lake, DeKalb, Kane, LaSalle, Kendall, Grundy, DuPage, Cook and Will counties in Illinois, along with Lake and Porter counties in Indiana, until 6 p.m. In Kankakee County in Illinois, along with Newton and Jasper counties in Indiana, a wind advisory will be in effect during those hours. According to forecasters, strong winds are expected to develop out of the south Tuesday evening, initially impacting east-west roadways, but those winds will shift later, impacting north-south roadways for the duration of the advisory. Those wind gusts could exceed 40-to-50 miles per hour in some locations in the advisory area, causing hazardous travel conditions. Wednesday morning, snow showers could only exacerbate the issues, potentially impacting morning commutes and causing hazardous travel conditions across the region. Forecasters with NWS are urging residents to consider postponing unnecessary travel in rural and outlying areas. Another challenge will come in the way of rapidly dropping temperatures, as wind chills will likely fall below zero by daybreak Wednesday. High temps for the remainder of the work week aren’t expected to get out of the teens, with wind chills hovering near or below zero through Saturday. This story uses functionality that may not work in our app. Click here to open the story in your web browser.
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