Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nor’easter bears down on Northeast

Severe weather leaves 670K without power

- By Dave Collins

A major spring storm brought heavy snow, rain and high winds to the Northeast into Thursday, downing trees and power lines and leaving nearly 700,000 homes and businesses without power. A woman was reported killed by a falling tree in a New York City suburb.

Two feet of snow is possible in parts of northern New England by Thursday evening, with wind gusts of 50 to 60 mph in coastal areas as well as inland, according to the National Weather Service.

Maine and New Hampshire bore the brunt of the power outages, with about 330,000 and 174,000 respective­ly as of mid-thursday afternoon, according to poweroutag­e.us. Local officials said the heavy, wet snow was to blame for bringing down trees and power lines. Power outages decreased from more than 700,000 to about 670,000 by the afternoon.

“This was pretty much a classic nor’easter,” said Stephen Baron, a meteorolog­ist for the weather service in York, Maine. “This is definitely a highend storm for April. It’s not crazy for us to get snow in April but not usually getting double-digit amounts.”

The weather service said it was the biggest April nor’easter to hit the region since 2020.

Over a foot of snow had fallen in Wolfeboro, New Hampshire, where some residents who had lost power checked in at the The Wolfeboro Inn, general manager Shawn Black said.

“This is a lot of heavy, wet snow,” he said. “And the wind is out of the northeast, so it’s really not nice in a sense of temperatur­e-wise, especially when the speed gets up to gusts of 55 mph. While I was out on the snowblower I could really feel my forehead just go numb.”

Heavy snow made travel treacherou­s in northern parts of New England and New York, and numerous accidents were reported.

A crash shut down Interstate 95 northbound near Lewiston, Maine, for a short time on Thursday morning. In Windham, Maine, near Portland, a Jeep lost control and struck a police cruiser, but no one was injured.

The storm brought mostly heavy rain to southern portions of the Northeast, as well as high winds.

Late Wednesday afternoon, a tree fell on a vehicle in the Westcheste­r County, New York, hamlet of Armonk, killing a woman who was the only person inside, police said.

Dozens of flights at airports in the region were canceled or delayed. Many schools and government offices were closed in northern areas.

State government was shutdown in Maine, where a special commission investigat­ing the October mass shooting in Lewiston had to postpone a scheduled hearing.

Utilities in northern New England said they were prepared for the storm, but power restoratio­n could still be lengthy.

Whipping winds and driving rain battered Boston. Staff at the New England Aquarium there did a sweep of the roof to make sure nothing could blow into the sea lion habitat.

 ?? Brianna Soukup The Associated Press ?? Emma Pidden waits for her bus following a spring snowstorm on Thursday in Portland, Maine.
Brianna Soukup The Associated Press Emma Pidden waits for her bus following a spring snowstorm on Thursday in Portland, Maine.

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