Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cruel winter’s creature

Temperatur­es to plunge below zero with heavy snow forecast

- SUSAN HAIGH AND DAVE COLLINS

Lydia Crawford fights her way through heavy snow Thursday in Atlantic City, N.J., as a winter storm roars over the East Coast, unleashing hurricane-force winds, flooding and up to 18 inches of snow. Forecaster­s warned of record lows and wind chills in the aftermath of the blizzard.

HARTFORD, Conn. — A winter storm roared into the East Coast on Thursday, threatenin­g to dump as much as 18 inches of snow from the Carolinas to Maine and unleashing hurricane-force winds and flooding that closed schools and offices and halted transporta­tion systems.

Forecaster­s expected the storm to be followed immediatel­y by a blast of face-stinging cold air that could break records in more than two dozen cities and bring wind chills as low as minus 40 degrees this weekend.

Blizzard warnings and states of emergency were in wide effect, and wind gusts hit more than 70 mph in some places. Eastern Massachuse­tts and most of Rhode Island braced for as much as 3 inches of snow per hour.

Four people were killed in North and South Carolina after their vehicles ran off snow-covered roads, authoritie­s said. Another fatality was reported near Philadelph­ia when a car could not stop at the bottom of a steep, snow-covered hill and slammed into a commuter train. A passenger in the vehicle was killed. No one on the train was hurt.

In New Jersey, Orlando Igmat’s car got stuck in a snowbank along the Garden State Parkway in Tinton Falls as he drove to work at Verizon. He waited a half-hour for a tow truck to pull him out.

“I didn’t expect [the storm] was going to be a heavy one. That’s why I went to work today. I’m going to stay in a hotel tonight,” he said.

More than 100,000 homes and businesses lost power at some point, depriving many people of heat. Connecticu­t opened more than 100 warming centers in 34 towns. More than half of the power failures — mostly in the South — were restored by Thursday afternoon.

The high winds caused coastal flooding from Massachuse­tts to Maine, overwhelmi­ng fishing piers, streets and restaurant­s. The rising waters also stranded people in homes and cars. A deliveryma­n wheels

The Massachuse­tts National Guard said it helped rescue a woman and her two children from a car in Marshfield. Flooding in Newburypor­t forced evacuation­s on Plum Island, and the only road from the island to the mainland was closed, police said.

Joe Weatherly, a 40-year-old artist from Los Angeles, was in Boston’s Seaport district, holding his Boston terrier while searching for a seafood restaurant. Part of the district was flooded.

“For someone in California, this is really, really scary. Mind blowing,” he said. “We don’t live in a state where things shut down with the weather. I’ve just never seen this much snow in my life.”

The high tide in Portland, Maine, reached 13.79 feet, nearly matching the 14.17-feet reported during the Blizzard of 1978.

Schools, businesses and ferry services in parts of the Canadian coast were also shut down. Nova Scotia Power said it had more than 1,000 people at the ready in its biggest-ever pre-storm mobilizati­on of personnel and resources.

Wind gusts strong enough to topple trees and power lines were predicted in the Delmarva Peninsula, which includes parts of Delaware, Virginia and Maryland; coastal New Jersey; eastern Long Island, N.Y.; and coastal eastern New England.

The flight-tracking site FlightAwar­e reported nearly 5,000 canceled flights across the United States. Those included more than two-thirds of flights in and out of New York City and Boston airports.

Natural gas, meanwhile, surged to 60 times the going rate as howling blizzard conditions stoked demand for the furnace fuel across the U.S. Northeast.

Spot prices for the fuel used to heat homes and generate power reached a record $175 per million British thermal units in New York, according to Consolidat­ed Edison Inc. That’s a far cry from the $2.93 that U.S. gas futures have been averaging on the New York Mercantile Exchange this winter.

Rail service was affected by the storm, too. Amtrak planned to operate a modified schedule between New York and Boston. Northeast Regional Service between Washington, D.C., and Newport News/Norfolk, Va., was canceled.

Waiting just behind the storm was a wave of bracing cold.

National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Dan Peterson said record low temperatur­es were predicted for 28 major cities across New England, eastern New York and the mid-Atlantic states by dawn Sunday.

State and local officials urged people to stay home so crews could clear away the snow. There were concerns in Boston and elsewhere that if roads were not properly cleared, the snow could freeze into cementlike ice after the cold blast arrives.

In other areas, plummeting temperatur­es caused water mains to burst. Jackson, Miss., was under a precaution­ary boil-water notice after pipes failed. Portable toilets were placed outside the state Capitol because some of the toilets would not flush.

The storm began two days ago in the Gulf of Mexico and first struck the Florida panhandle. Some meteorolog­ists described it as a “bomb cyclone,” a term that comes from the process of bombogensi­s, when the barometric pressure drops steeply in a short period.

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Ben Finley, Martha Waggoner, Michelle R. Smith, Michael Casey,Anthony Izaguirre, Frank Eltman and Julio Cortez of The Associated Press and by Naureen S. Malik and Tim Loh of Bloomberg News.

 ?? AP/MATT ROURKE ??
AP/MATT ROURKE
 ?? AP/CHARLES KRUPA ?? packages across a snow-covered Boston street on Thursday. A foot of snow was forecast for the Boston area.
AP/CHARLES KRUPA packages across a snow-covered Boston street on Thursday. A foot of snow was forecast for the Boston area.

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