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The first big dump of snow of the season is snarling traffic on streets and highways in central and southern Alberta.
And tire shops are backed up as people rush to swap the rubber on their cars and trucks.
Monday morning, Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) issued a snowfall warning, saying 10 to 15 centimetres of the white stuff was expected to fall in a stretch of central and southern Alberta that reaches from the Rocky Mountains to Saskatchewan, from just south of Edmonton to Claresholm and Medicine Hat.
Both Calgary and Red Deer are in the middle of that warning area.
“Snow will end tonight over central regions tonight and on Tuesday for southern regions,” ECCC wrote on Monday morning.
Within Calgary city limits, police said there were more than a dozen collisions in the early morning hours.

City of Calgary crews were out spreading anti-icing material, as the temperatures were expected to stay warm enough for the application.
Last week, the city said it would pay extra attention to allowing greater accessibility and mobility of all types in this year’s snow plan.
RCMP said stretches of the QEII Highway between Red Deer and Calgary had poor driving conditions on Monday, with more than 18 collisions experienced that morning.
One collision involved a school bus that contained students on Highway 2A north of Didsbury that sent six to hospital.
Authorities advised drivers to drive to the conditions of the road or to avoid driving because of the inclement weather.

Having appropriate tires on your vehicle helps keep you safe as well as everyone else on the road, according to Bret Morley, a Calgary Kal Tire manager.
“Having the right tires on or at least the mountain peak-snowflake (icon on) tires is going to make sure that the roads are safe, not only for the person driving that vehicle, but the others on the road as well. So we think it’s vitally important,” Morley said.
Morley said with the wintry weather coming into Calgary, wait times for tire swaps have climbed.
“We have our normal customers that are proactive and we try to encourage more to do so as well so that way when the snow does fly, we can support that demand, and not have as much of a push,” he said. “But obviously we expand capacity through all of our locations and we know what’s coming.”
More to come…
© 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
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