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Rare snowstorm hammers western Oregon

With cars staying off the roads, Lindsay Pepper, a grad student at the University of Oregon, has 15th Avenue to herself as she cross-country skis through the UO campus, Thursday, Feb. 6, 2014, after a snowstorm moved through the area in Eugene, Ore. AP Photo/The Register-Guard, Chris PIetsch

PORTLAND, Ore. – A rare and powerful snowstorm hammered parts of the Pacific Northwest on Thursday, dropping more than 30 centimetres snow in parts of western Oregon and southwest Washington.

Part two of the storm is expected to hit Oregon on Friday afternoon, bringing another 15 to 30 centimetres of snow.

Thursday’s storm left one person dead in a massive Interstate 5 pileup in southwest Washington, caused multiple other wrecks and closed schools and offices.

Many school districts in the region cancelled Friday’s classes as well.

The snowstorm also caused a string of multiple car crashes on I-5 near Albany, Ore., essentially closing the highway there for five hours, the Oregon Transportation Department said.

Highway crews in Oregon’s Willamette Valley geared up for a night of snowplowing and sanding, focusing on highways that are most critical for commuters and businesses, Transportation Department spokesman Rick Little said.

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“The public should understand there are simply not enough plows, sanders and staff to bring all highways in the region to bare pavement tonight,” Little said.

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The last back-to-back snow event like this in the region hit in December 2008, said meteorologist Colby Neuman in the National Weather Service’s Portland office.

The big I-5 pileup that killed one person and injured others occurred across the Columbia River in Washington state’s Clark County.

At least half a dozen tractor-trailers were involved in the collision on the snow-covered freeway, The Columbian reported.

Washington State Patrol Trooper Steve Schatzel said several people were trapped in the wreckage. One suffered injuries described as critical and two others suffered serious injuries.

Oregon State Police Lt. Steve Mitchell described a 25-vehicle pileup on I-5 near Albany as “pure chaos.”

Traffic backed up for miles. Only minor injuries were reported.

Oregon’s largest city, Portland, recorded nine centimetres of snow by Thursday evening. Cars slipped and slid as commuters left work early. Some good-hearted residents helped push vehicles that got stuck.

A school bus slid on ice and collided with a car Thursday afternoon in Aloha, west of Portland, but firefighters said one of the children on the bus was taken to a hospital.

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Snowfall totals as of Thursday night included 33 centimetres in the small town of Vernonia, Ore., northwest of Portland, and 25 centimetres in St. Helens, north of Portland along the Columbia River. Snow also fell along the Oregon coast; the community of Wheeler got 23 centimetres.

In the Willamette Valley south of Portland, Corvallis got 24 centimetres and Albany reported 19 centimetres.

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