Rare dust storm blows through Chicago area


The Chicago area is once again looking at a stormy evening with the potential for some severe weather Friday night, and a rare dust storm warning was issued for much of the Chicago area as blowing dust is causing reduced visibility on several Interstate highways.

Unlike Thursday, however, the threat and expected severity of any potential thunderstorms are lower and mainly concentrated southeast of the city. 

Warm, windy conditions with low humidity are prompting a Wind Advisory and Red Flag Warning for high fire danger. High temperatures are pushing well into the 80s.

Multiple dust storm warnings were issued as a wall of dust moved through the Chicago area at 50 mph, though most have since expired or been cancelled.

The National Weather Service said a dust storm has caused significantly reduced visibility on Interstate 55 near Shorewood, Interstate 57, and Interstate 80 near Joliet, along with Interstate 65 near Crown Point, Indiana.

att-kio2yporkaplrklfz2tu0-prsxfgqllmmy7oi8y1leg.jpg

A dust storm blows through Morris, Illinois, during a high school graduation ceremony on May 16, 2025

CBS


A literal wall of dust blowing through the Chicago area could quickly drop visibility to almost zero as the dust storm blows through. Visibility dropped noticeably in downtown Chicago shortly before 7 p.m.

In Kankakee County, visibility was down to zero around 6:30 p.m., but was back up to 10 miles by 7 p.m.

The same dust storm later dropped visibility to zero at Midway International Airport, where a ground stop was in place until 8 p.m. At O’Hare International Airport, a ground stop was issued through 8:15 p.m. due to incoming thunderstorms.

As showers and storms in some areas hit at the same time as the dust storm, there have been reports of almost a “mud rain.” 

According to the National Weather Service, wind gusts could reach over 70 miles per hour during the storms. 

The most significant storm threat remains east of I-55. 

Cooler, dry weather settles in this weekend but a rainy pattern returns next week. Early projections show that we may total 1″ to 1.5″ of rain Monday night through Wednesday morning.

Cooler and dry weather will then settle in for the weekend. 

A few schools closed due to power outages

A small number of schools announced closures Friday due to power outages in the wake of Thursday’s severe weather events.

As of 7:30 a.m. Friday, Crown Point Community School, Lake Station Community Schools and Manhattan District #114 had all reported closures.

There will be no on-site and e-learning at Arbor Park School Distirct #145 due to power and internet outages.

Next week’s temperatures back off significantly in Chicago

Summer-like conditions continue as highs reach near 90 degrees.   

05f15bf9-df26-42ca-980e-eb7f4be05fea.png

Winds remain strong into the night and Saturday. Click here to see our full seven day forecast.



Source link