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Saturday was snowiest November day in Chicago, as nearly 9 inches blanketed parts of city

If the weekend’s snowstorm seemed unusual for this time of the year, it was.

Saturday was the snowiest November day ever recorded in Chicago, according to the National Weather Service.

The storm dumped almost 9 inches of snow on parts of the city over two days. O’Hare Airport reported 8.4 inches on Saturday and 0.3 inches on Sunday. Midway had 7.2 inches as of noon Sunday, according to the weather service.

Snow covers a sculpture outside Soldier Field. The two-day storm dropped nearly 9 inches of snow across the Chicago area and snarled air and road traffic for people heading home from Thanksgiving.

Candace Dane Chambers/Sun-Times

The storm didn’t let up until late Sunday morning, and a winter weather advisory was extended from 6 a.m. to noon. A “quick coating of snow” blanketed the city before the storm system moved out of the area, weather service meteorologist Zachary Yack said.

The snowiest November day had been Nov. 6, 1951, which saw 8 inches, Yack said. The previous record for Nov. 29 was set in 1942 with 3 inches of snow. Chicago weather records go back to 1884.

Travelers both on the road and in the air were affected by the weather.

State troopers responded to 480 crashes, 66 of them with people injured, on Chicago-area expressways from 5 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. Saturday, according to Illinois State Police. Troopers also helped about 300 drivers who called for assistance, according to state police.

Bundled-up pedestrians walk Sunday in the Loop. Another snow storm could move into the area Monday morning. Wind chills Wednesday and Thursday could dip below zero.

Candace Dane Chambers/Sun-Times

Another 1 to 3 inches of snow are slated to start falling around 1 p.m. Monday into early Tuesday morning, as well as a chance of snow Wednesday afternoon and evening. Temperatures will continue to drop, with lows falling into the single digits Wednesday night and hitting zero late Thursday, and wind chills could drop below zero on both days, the weather service said.

The Illinois Department of Transportation said it was continuing to treat and clear roads, but warned “trouble spots” could freeze overnight and add to already slick conditions.

It wasn’t the end of headaches for area drivers either, as the city’s parking ban was slated to go into effect at midnight Sunday.

More than 1,300 flights were canceled at Chicago airports Saturday.

As of 8 p.m. Sunday, about two-thirds of O’Hare’s flights had been delayed and another 13% canceled in the preceding 24 hours. At Midway, about half of the flights had been delayed and about 2% canceled. The average delays at both airports were about an hour.

Despite fewer cancellations and delays on Sunday, people traveling by air were still feeling the impact.

Snow dusts the peaks of the First United Methodist Church in the Loop Sunday.

Candace Dane Chambers/Sun-Times

Ashton Zigler, a third-year student at Virginia Tech University, stood in front of the United departures board Sunday afternoon and saw his flight to Virginia was delayed four hours. That was after his Saturday flight home was canceled about 12 hours before it was set to take off.

It was the first time he experienced a canceled flight since he started the trips back home for the holidays three years ago. Luckily for his parents, it meant they had an extra pair of hands to help shovel snow outside the family’s South Side home.

Ashton Zigler, 21, takes a video of the delays on a video board at O’Hare Airport Sunday afternoon.

Violet Miller/Sun-Times

“Usually, it doesn’t snow this early,” Zigler, 21, said. “I should’ve flown out on Friday. It’s always that Chicago weather. … [But] that’s the upside, I get to spend more time at home, which is nice.”

Before heading off to his terminal, Zigler said he planned to catch up on homework in the airport. He hoped his flight stayed on track so he wouldn’t have to miss class Monday morning.

Kim Ottum was the only one in her family whose flight wasn’t delayed or canceled this Thanksgiving. Her son and daughter-in-law’s flight Saturday out of Midway was canceled, and they had to spend a night in a hotel.

She glanced at the United Airlines screen to see no delays on her seven-hour flight to Alaska, where she moved 30 years ago.

“But we’re not there yet,” Ottum said.

Anna Bettmering, a 29-year-old Germany native, had already been traveling for 24 hours when she arrived at O’Hare Sunday, missing her connecting flight to Las Vegas, where she’s heading for a business trip.

Bettmering said her time in Chicago consisted of getting off the plane and heading to the United Airlines desk to try to find another flight. She eventually did and was hoping to make it there by midnight.

She was hoping to see some of Las Vegas before she got pulled into work.

“I thought I’d have a little bit more time to see” Vegas, she said. But “I will come back [to Chicago] when it’s not winter and I’m not on business.”

Her advice to other travelers?

“Maybe avoid Chicago in the wintertime,” she said, laughing. “Now I’m on standby, but I’m not really trusting it.”

Contributing: Casey He

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