Showing posts with label Winter storm 2015. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Winter storm 2015. Show all posts

Winter storm 2015

Winter storm 2015, Parts of the Northeast got their first real taste of winter on Saturday as a storm crawling up the coast left a slushy, snowy coating from Pennsylvania to New England, but forecasters are watching a possible second shot of snow that could affect the region early in the work week.

By midday, the storm had dropped 9 inches of snow in parts of Pennsylvania and 8 inches in parts of New York, northern New Jersey and northwestern Connecticut, with widespread reports over 4 inches in inland areas across southern New England. Lighter amounts were reported in Philadelphia, New York City and Boston.

The storm was expected to drop up to 8 inches in far eastern Maine before moving out late Saturday night.

Numerous accidents were reported on the slick roads, but there were no major highway backups in the lighter weekend traffic. Police in Connecticut and Massachusetts were investigating the weather's role in traffic accidents that killed two people Saturday afternoon.

In suburban New York, a man chased his dog onto ice covering a lake and they both fell through it. Police used a ladder to pull the man out of Massapequa Lake to safety and rescued his shivering dog as well. The man was treated at a hospital for hypothermia, a dangerously low body temperature.

Rain and sleet mixed in with the snow in areas that saw above-freezing temperatures nearer to the coast, keeping totals down in those areas before the storm began to taper off."It's not really bad out there, as long as you don't drive like a maniac," Vernon Forrest, of Manchester, New Jersey, said while getting some coffee and a sandwich at a convenience store in Toms River. "The road crews did an excellent job, and we got more rain and sleet here than snow, so it's mostly just wet roads. So just keep an eye out for slippery, slushy spots and speeding knuckleheads."

But people were urged to watch for icy roads as temperatures dropped below freezing into Sunday morning.

Winds gusting to 50 mph were expected on Cape Cod and nearby islands Saturday night as the storm moves away.

Another system beginning Sunday night into Monday is expected to drop another inch or two across Pennsylvania, with a potentially bigger one behind it late Monday.

"There is an increasing possibility of a significant storm late Monday night into Tuesday night," said National Weather Service meteorologist Bill Simpson in Taunton, Massachusetts, adding that there's still much uncertainty this far ahead. "It's how it evolves once it develops."

He said there is the potential that a storm moving up the East Coast could stall before it tracks out to sea, bringing high wind, heavy precipitation and the potential for coastal flooding.

Winter storm 2015

Winter storm 2015, A storm of "historic" proportions is expected to hit the East Coast Monday into Tuesday, bringing as much as 3 feet of snow to some areas.

Parts of seven states were under a blizzard warning Sunday night as the system moved toward the Northeast.

In New York, Mayor Bill de Blasio said the storm, named Juno, was likely to be one of the biggest to ever strike New York City. He urged New Yorkers to stay indoors until the storm moves out sometime on Tuesday.

 "This could be a storm the likes of which we have never seen before,"  de Blasio said at a news conference Sunday.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in a statement that the storm could close the New York State Thruway and the Long Island Expressway.

According to FlightAware, around 1,400 flights scheduled for Monday are expected to be canceled.

Elsewhere in the Northeast, Boston is expected to get 18 to 24 inches of snow, with up to 3 feet west of the city, and Philadelphia could see 14 to 18 inches, the weather service said.We do anticipate very heavy snowfall totals," Bob Oravec, lead forecaster with the weather service in College Park, Maryland, told the AP. "In addition to heavy snow, with blizzard warnings, there's a big threat of high, damaging winds, and that will be increasing Monday into Tuesday. A lot of blowing, drifting and such."

Wind gusts of 75 mph or more are possible for coastal areas of Massachusetts, and up to 50 mph further inland, Oravec said.

The Washington area is not expected to get a large amount of snow, but federal employees are being encouraged to watch the weather reports.

The storm has prompted airlines to shut down operations in airports in New York, Boston and Washington, D.C., according to a story from The Associated Press.

Much of the region from New Jersey to Maine is under blizzard warnings from Monday afternoon through Tuesday night, according to the National Weather Service. The NWS predicts 2 to 3 feet of snow for a 250-mile stretch of the Northeast, including the New York and Boston areas. Philadelphia should get 14 to 18 inches.According to the AP, most major airlines are allowing customers whose flights are canceled in the next few days to book new flights without paying a penalty.

Here are the websites for major airports in the Northeast that are expected to be impacted by the storm: