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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Chicago records no snow on ground in January, February for 1st time in 146 years

Ciprian Sava and his son Sebastian, 2, of Chicago look out across Northerly Island on an unseasonably warm day on Feb. 19, 2017. (Nancy Stone/Chicago Tribune/TNS) (Nancy Stone / Chicago Tribune)
By Grace Wong Chicago Tribune

CHICAGO – For the first time in 146 years, the National Weather Service documented no snow on the ground in Chicago in January and February – a record that put a spring in the step of some but weighed down others worried about climate change.

Because the snow measurement is taken at 6 a.m. at O’Hare International Airport, small amounts of snow that may have fallen later in the day and melted were not recorded, said Amy Seeley, meteorologist with the National Weather Service. This occurred Feb. 25 when there was a trace of snow and Jan. 30 when there was 0.1 inch. The weather service has been keeping data on snow on the ground for 146 years.

The record near-snowless start was overshadowed Tuesday by severe storms moving through the state.

The National Weather Service forecast large hail, winds, localized flooding and tornadoes Tuesday evening. A tornado hit Ottawa on Tuesday evening, killing one person, and the weather service said its spotters had reported a number of other tornadoes.

More stormy weather was forecast for the week, including possible snow.

WGN-TV meteorologist Tom Skilling said he believes the 146-year streak in Chicago is part of climate change and emphasized that it does not occur linearly, meaning that there is potential for cold winters in the future.

“This is occurring against a backdrop of a changing climate,” Skilling said. “I think the door is open to additional unusual weather events as we go forward.”

Other climate scientists say blips of weather, such as warm spells or snowless months, are too short of a time period to assign a true cause, and meteorologists point out that there are natural variances in weather over time that have nothing to do with climate change.