U.S. East Coast Facing Blizzard as Snow Grounds Flights

| January 3, 2014
Storm

Storm

Courtesy of Bloomberg: A storm along the U.S. East Coast brought snow and wind chills to the region, threatening blizzard conditions and disrupting travel amid highway closures and thousands of flight cancellations.

Boxford, north of Boston, received 21 inches (53 centimeters) of snow as of 9:12 p.m. yesterday, while New York City’s Central Park got 5 inches as of 3:45 a.m., the National Weather Service said. Boston may receive as much as 14 inches and its western and southern suburbs might get as much as 18 inches, said Kim Buttrick, a meteorologist with the service in Taunton, Massachusetts.

The storm contributed to 1,377 flights within, into, or out of the U.S. being canceled and 287 delayed as of 5:35 a.m. New York time, according to FlightAware, a Houston-based airline tracking service. About 2,400 flights were canceled yesterday. All New York City public schools will be closed today due to severe weather conditions, according to an e-mailed statement from schools Chancellor Carmen Farina.

“It’s a quick hitter but high impact,” Buttrick said by telephone. “It’s far enough offshore that it will give all of southern New England snow. The worst of it is going to come overnight and the morning rush hour.”

Blowing and drifting of powdery snow will make travel conditions “extremely dangerous,” the weather service said in a blizzard warning, adding that “strong winds and very cold wind chills” are expected through this afternoon. The threat of whiteout conditions prompted New York Governor Andrew Cuomo to order the Long Island Expressway closed at midnight.

Dangerous’ Temperatures
Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick ordered state offices to remain closed today, warning that temperatures outside were “very, very dangerous.” Cuomo and New Jersey Governor Chris Christie declared states of emergency. New York City Mayor Bill De Blasio, in his second day in the office, said “we are ready for whatever hits us.”

Operations at Boston Logan International Airport were winding down as the storm intensified, Ed Freni, director of aviation at the Massachusetts Port Authority, said by telephone from Boston. Airlines were scheduled to shut operations by about 8 p.m. yesterday.

The airport will remain open during the storm and flight operations will probably resume before noon local time today, Freni said. Some airlines have posted departure times as early as 9:30 a.m., he said.

Coastal flooding closed roads in Massachusetts, including in Boston and Quincy. The state public transportation system will remain open today, Patrick said.

Voluntary Evacuations
Voluntary evacuations have been recommended in low-lying areas of Scituate and Duxbury, two coastal Massachusetts towns where high tides are expected as the brunt of the storm hits in hours to come, according to Patrick.

In Boston, New England’s largest city, Mayor Thomas Menino shuttered public schools and libraries, keeping City Hall open.

Connecticut state offices are set to open an hour later than usual today to give workers time to plow roads, Governor Dan Malloy said in a statement. In New Jersey, state court buildings and courthouses were ordered closed today.

New York City subway express service was halted because of snow, and the Metro-North rail line between New York City and Connecticut was scheduled to reduce service after 8 p.m. local time yesterday. New York City’s Office of Emergency Management issued an alert advising drivers to stay off the roads.

Metro-North and the Long Island Rail Road will also run on reduced schedules today, offering about 60 percent of normal weekday trains, Cuomo said in an e-mailed statement.

New York
Two ferry services under contract to Metro-North, the Haverstraw-Ossining Ferry and the Newburgh-Beacon Ferry, will not run today. Hudson RailLink will operate on a special schedule. Amtrak canceled some trains between Boston and Washington.

Winter storm warnings and weather advisories stretched from Indiana to Maine and as far south as Georgia.

Philadelphia was forecast to receive 5 to 10 inches of snow, according to the weather service. In Cleveland, 8 to 10 inches were expected to fall and Pittsburgh may get 3 to 5.

The snow will be followed by a blast of frigid air that will drive temperatures down, Buttrick said. Readings across southern New England will range from 0 to minus 10 Fahrenheit (minus 17 to minus 23 Celsius), she said.

Category: General Update

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