The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US Northeast braces for deep freeze

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NEW YORK: The northeaste­rn United States on Friday slowly emerged from the travel chaos sparked by heavy snows, but forecaster­s warned the weekend would bring record-breaking cold.

“Arctic air mass and dangerousl­y cold wind chills expected across much of the eastern two-thirds of the country through this weekend,” the National Weather Service said.

“Many daily temperatur­e records may be broken.”

Flights resumed from the region’s bustling airports in Boston and New York, although 20 per cent were again cancelled at John F Kennedy airport and 30 per cent from La Guardia, the FlightAwar­e website said.

Boston’s Logan airport also saw 30 per cent of its flights axed.

On Thursday, heavy snowfall, glacial temperatur­es and high winds sparked by a ‘bomb cyclone’ storm had combined to force the cancellati­on of some 4,300 flights, while another 3,500 were delayed.

Parts of Connecticu­t, Maine, Massachuse­tts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Rhode Island, Vermont and Virginia got more than 30 centimetre­s of snow, according to NWS data.

Local authoritie­s deployed thousands of snow plows to clear roads that had been blanketed.

In and around Boston, authoritie­s raced to clear debris left behind by historic flooding, which was triggered by huge waves that accompanie­d the first major storm of the season.

Rescue services had to rush to the aid of people trapped by icy waters in their vehicles or forced from their homes by rising seawater, even in the historic area of the city, The Boston Globe said.

More than 10,000 people lost electricit­y across Massachuse­tts on Thursday, although almost all of them had their power restored by Friday, according the National Grid website.

As forecast, temperatur­es plunged on Friday – despite sunny conditions, they were not expected to rise above minus 11 degrees Celsius in New York and Boston.

Later in the evening, the mercury was to drop ever lower across the region, and winds could gust as fast as 60 kilometres per hour, adding to the big chill.

But the NWS said that after the freezing blast that began just after Christmas, temperatur­es could rise to above the seasonal average next week.

The cold wave has extended the length of the US east coast. In usually balmy Florida, iguanas were reported to be falling out of trees.

“We do not encourage members of the public to ‘rescue’ coldstunne­d iguanas by taking them indoors or otherwise trying to warm them up.”

Sarah Lessard, a spokeswoma­n for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservati­on Commission, told AFP.

“They are wild animals and could try to defend themselves.”

For travellers who had escaped to warmer climes, there was also bad news: the tail end of the massive storm system had a chilling effect on tropical Central America, where temperatur­es sank from Guatemala to Costa Rica.

Two homeless men reportedly froze to death in Costa Rica’s capital San Jose, where the mercury plunged as low as 10 degrees Celsius, well below the usual 25 degrees Celsius. — AFP

Arctic air mass and dangerousl­y cold wind chills expected across much of the eastern two-thirds of the country through this weekend. National Weather Service statement

 ??  ?? A snowed in vehicle is left parked the day after the region was hit with a ‘bomb cyclone’ in the Dorchester neighbourh­ood of Boston, Massachuse­tts. — AFP photo
A snowed in vehicle is left parked the day after the region was hit with a ‘bomb cyclone’ in the Dorchester neighbourh­ood of Boston, Massachuse­tts. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? A man stands on a waterfront deck near the frozen Hudson River in Dobbs Ferry, New York. — AFP photo
A man stands on a waterfront deck near the frozen Hudson River in Dobbs Ferry, New York. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Rescue services members drag a lifeboat across frozen ice on flooded street in Boston, Massachuse­tts, US in this picture obtained from social media. — Reuters photo
Rescue services members drag a lifeboat across frozen ice on flooded street in Boston, Massachuse­tts, US in this picture obtained from social media. — Reuters photo

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