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Las Vegas-area adopts climate and sustainability plan

Incoming snowstorm brings school closings to Columbus area

Columbus schools, most other districts cancel classes or go remote as snowstorm moves in The Columbus Dispatch © Courtney Hergesheimer/Columbus Dispatch Three year old, Michael Harris, walks around his Clintonville neighborhood, with his mother Katie, shoveling as he goes, Monday, February 15, 2021. Central Ohio was prepared to be walloped by a snowstorm Monday night headed into Tuesday, resulting in some snow days in the area. Meteorologists expected 3-4 inches of accumulation as precipitation transitions to snow by about 10 p.m., said James Gibson, observing program leader at the National Weather Service in Wilmington. Actual snowfall appeared to be less than an inch, but travel was still hazardous.

Ivan Milat: How notorious serial killer died

The cause of death of one of Australia s most notorious serial killers has been revealed. Ivan Milat, known as the backpacker killer, was serving a life sentence at Sydney s Long Bay Jail when he died. A coronial inquest into his death ruled that at 4.07am on October 27, 2019 the 74-year-old succumbed to oesophageal cancer. Serial killer Ivan Milat died of natural causes related to his terminal cancer.(A Current Affair) A sick Milat is pictured in a wheelchair leaving hospital in 2019 before his death.(9News) In the early hours of that morning, Milat was found unresponsive in his cell. There were instructions not to resuscitate him and he was pronounced dead.

Columbus weather: Sleet expected to transition to snow overnight

The Dispatch will continue to update this story during the storm s movement and aftermath. Windshields have been scraped clean and sidewalks plowed. And now, forecasters say, another, smaller snow pattern is headed into central Ohio. What s the forecast like for later this week? The National Weather Service is calling for additional snow beginning late Wednesday that may total an inch in Franklin County by Thursday morning s rush hour, said Steve Hrebenach, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Wilmington, Periodic snow showers should end by late Thursday, with no more than three inches of accumulation, he said. Temperatures should also climb to near freezing by Thursday, so warming shelters may not be as needed and shoveling may become easier as salt treatments become more effective.

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