Lodi News-Sentinel

‘Bomb cyclone’ batters East Coast

- By Nina Agrawal

NEW YORK — Following days of mild temperatur­es and hints of spring as the calendar approached March, winter returned to the Northeast with a bang Friday, as rain and snow drove down in sheets and winds blew at gale force, prompting dire warnings of coastal flooding, dangerous sea conditions and power outages.

“As the saying goes, March is coming in like a lion,” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in a news release. “I am asking for everyone to listen to weather forecasts in your community and take the necessary precaution­s to prepare for conditions.”

The storm originated as a system of low pressure in the Great Lakes region that dumped snow on northeaste­rn Michigan and Ohio and then rapidly intensifie­d as it moved east, Marc Chenard, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service, said.

“It’s that rapid intensific­ation that is bringing high-impact weather,” including heavy snow inland and flooding in coastal areas, Chenard said.

Forecast to hit eastern Massachuse­tts especially hard, the effects of the storm, which began with rain Thursday night and turned to snow Friday, were being felt up and down the Atlantic Coast on Friday, from North Carolina to Maine.

National Guard troops have been called in, schools closed, and communitie­s urged to evacuate. More than 2,500 flights across the U.S. have been canceled, with New York-area and Boston airports the most affected, according to the flight tracking website FlightAwar­e.

The powerful nor’easter struck the East Coast at the same time California braced for blizzards in the Sierra Nevada and floods in burned-out areas of Santa Barbara County.

In Massachuse­tts, Gov. Charlie Baker said at a news conference Thursday that the storm was “shaping up to be more severe than” the early January “bomb cyclone” that brought heavy snow, frigid temperatur­es and fierce winds to the region.

Baker, who activated National Guard troops to assist with emergency response, urged residents in historical­ly flood-prone coastal areas to follow any evacuation orders they receive, warning that astronomic­ally high tides combined with storm surges will prevent water from receding.

“It’s possible that first responders will be unable to reach all flooded areas at peak high tide,” he said. “Do not ride out the storm in your home if you are told to evacuate.”

Meteorolog­ists predicted that the seas in Boston Harbor could rise to above 15 feet, breaking the record set on Jan. 4.

“Take this storm seriously! This is a LIFE & DEATH situation for those living on the coast,” the National Weather Service’s Boston office tweeted Thursday.

In New York state, parts of Long Island were also experienci­ng flooding Friday morning, and some upstate areas south of Buffalo had already received more than a foot and a half of snow.

Ahead of the storm Cuomo activated New York’s State Emergency Operations Center and deployed senior officials across the state to assist with emergency management.

 ?? KEVIN C. DOWNS/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS ?? Left: The New York City Fire Department responds to a report of a fallen scaffold and buried cars on Friday in Manhattan.
KEVIN C. DOWNS/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Left: The New York City Fire Department responds to a report of a fallen scaffold and buried cars on Friday in Manhattan.

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