Orlando Sentinel

Winter storm pummeling Northeast with snow, rain

- By Julie Walker and Karen Matthews

NEW YORK — A dangerous winter storm brought significan­t snowfall, strong thundersto­rms and blustery winds to the Northeaste­rn U.S. on a holiday Monday.

The storm system dropped a foot or more of snow in parts of New York state, Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia on Sunday night through Monday morning after pummeling parts of the Southeast on Sunday.

“We’ve had a very strong area of low pressure that’s kind of moved up the coast, with pretty heavy snowfall accumulati­ons from Tennessee, North Carolina all the way into the Northeast,” said meteorolog­ist Marc Chenard at the weather service’s headquarte­rs in College Park, Maryland.

Forecaster­s in Buffalo, New York, said almost 18 inches of snow fell by 1 p.m. Monday.

The city advised people not to travel if they didn’t need to on this Martin Luther King Jr. Day, while some surroundin­g towns instituted a travel ban.

“WOW! (Latest) snow measuremen­t at 1 AM was 4.6 inches in the last hour at the Buffalo Airport!” the National Weather Service in Buffalo tweeted overnight. “And tack on another 4 inches in the last hour ending at 2 AM! Total so far since late Sun evening — 10.2 inches.”

Weather service meteorolog­ist Alexa Maines said 15 inches or more of snow were reported in Cleveland and 25 inches in parts of Ashtabula County in the northeast corner of Ohio.

Power outages affected tens of thousands of customers in the Northeast, and hundreds of flights were canceled. Many COVID-19 vaccinatio­n and testing sites had to close down.

New York City got less than an inch of snow, which was washed away by rain overnight. The weather service said spotty showers and snow showers might continue through Monday night.

Forecaster­s said wind gusts in New York City could top out around 45 mph, and around 60 mph on Long Island.

Sleet and rain were the main threats for much of Massachuse­tts, Connecticu­t and Rhode Island. Periods of snowfall transition­ed to rain overnight. NWS meteorolog­ists in Boston said wind gusts could reach 70 mph.

The howling winds spread a fire that destroyed a motel and two other structures in coastal Salisbury, Massachuse­tts, early Monday.

The storm brought similar conditions Sunday to the Southeast, where thousands were still without power Monday.

Multiple states reported heavy snowfall, and two people died Sunday in North Carolina when their car drove off the road. The roof of a dormitory partially collapsed in the state at Brevard College, with officials saying it broke under the weight of snow. There were no injuries.

Severe thundersto­rms in Florida spun up a tornado with 118 mph winds, destroying 30 mobile homes and damaging 51 more. Three minor injuries were reported.

 ?? ALEXANDRA WIMLEY/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ?? Liz Barre and Sarah Stapleton, students at Pittsburgh’s Carnegie Mellon University, enjoy the snow Monday in Oakland, Pennsylvan­ia.
ALEXANDRA WIMLEY/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE Liz Barre and Sarah Stapleton, students at Pittsburgh’s Carnegie Mellon University, enjoy the snow Monday in Oakland, Pennsylvan­ia.

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