Storm flinging snow, ice to stalk I-95
HARTFORD, Conn. — A fast-moving coastal storm is forecast to blast several major cities in the Northeast with a mix of snow, sleet and rain today along the busy Interstate 95 corridor.
The biggest snowfall amounts are expected in southern New England, but forecasters warned that temperatures hovering near freezing could make for slippery driving conditions across the region.
“It’s a good thing it’s happening this weekend,” National Weather Service meteorologist Bill Simpson in Taunton, Mass., said Friday. “If this happened during a weekday, it could be really slow and messy.”
A winter-storm warning was issued Friday for a large portion of central Pennsylvania ahead of the storm.
Forecasters said a wide area between Gettysburg and Johnstown, stretching from West Virginia through Maryland to just south of State College and Williamsport, could get 5 to 8 inches of snow between Friday night and this afternoon.
The Maryland State Highway Administration warned motorists that travel may become hazardous. The agency said it would have salt and snowplows at the ready, as well as chain saws in case of fallen trees.
As the storm moved northeast along the Eastern Seaboard, it was expected to drop 2 to 4 inches of snow and ice in Philadelphia this morning before turning to rain.
It was forecast to drop 3 to 4 inches of snow on New York City and 4 to 6 inches in Boston, with higher amounts in central Massachusetts, before moving out to sea by early Sunday.
After a relatively tame start to the winter, Connecticut has plenty of salt and snow-treatment chemicals stockpiled around the state and a fleet of 632 plow trucks ready to go, Department of Transportation spokesman Kevin Nursick said.
He said crews have been pretreating some highways and bridges, but there already was some salt on them left over from recent, smaller storms.
“We don’t need to go full tilt,” he said.
The storm was expected to begin as snow across much of the region, with areas east of I-95 receiving mostly rain. Forecasters said accumulation amounts would depend on how quickly the rain line moved west.
The weather service said the Philadelphia area could receive as much as a quarter-inch of ice this morning.
Meteorologist Peter Wichrowski in Upton, N.Y., said snow likely would start to fall in New York City in the early morning hours of today, with a mix of rain and maybe a little sleet along the coastal areas. He said snowfall totals were expected to be around 1 to 2 inches across eastern Long Island.
Baltimore and Washington were expected to get only rain as temperatures hover just above freezing.