Bangkok Post

Arctic chill prompts school closures across Northeast

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WASHINGTON: An Arctic blast gripped much of the northeaste­rn United States on Tuesday with bitter cold and subzero wind chill factors, prompting numerous school districts across the region, including Boston, to cancel classes for the day.

The frosty air mass sweeping New England brought single-digit temperatur­es to most of Massachuse­tts, with the added chill from winds making it feel as cold as zero degrees Fahrenheit and below “for just about everyone,” the National Weather Service (NWS) said.

“If you must go outside today, be sure to dress in extra layers!,” the NWS office in Boston tweeted. Exposure to dangerousl­y low wind-chill factors can lead to frostbite, the weather service warned.

Schools were closed on Tuesday in Massachuse­tts’ three largest public education districts — Boston, Worcester and Springfiel­d — idling roughly 107,000 students.

Anticipate­d transporta­tion delays due to Covid-19-related driver shortages were also a factor in the decision to shutter Worcester schools, to avoid leaving schoolchil­dren waiting at bus stops for too long, the district tweeted.

Classes were likewise cancelled for all students in Syracuse, New York; Manchester, New Hampshire; and Burlington, Vermont, all citing extreme cold for their closures.

In Rhode Island, the state Emergency Management Agency announced public warming centers would be opened on Tuesday in 33 communitie­s for those who need to seek temporary shelter from dangerousl­y low temperatur­es.

A warmer air mass was expected to move into the Northeast as early as yesterday, substantia­lly easing the region’s chill, the NWS forecast.

Across the country, heavy rains soaked western Washington state on Tuesday in the latest “atmospheri­c river” to drench the Pacific Northwest as a low-pressure area funnels a stream of moisture into the Olympic Peninsula and Cascades through yesterday, the NWS said.

Flood watches were posted for much of the Puget Sound region around Seattle, an area already saturated from torrential downpours and flooding last week, with the NWS warning of the possibilit­y of renewed landslides as well.

 ?? AFP ?? Icicles hang from a fountain at Bryant Park in Manhattan, New York City.
AFP Icicles hang from a fountain at Bryant Park in Manhattan, New York City.

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