Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Storm pelts Northeast with snow

Schools, flights canceled while conditions grow worse

- DAVE COLLINS Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Jake Offenhartz, Philip Marcelo, Carolyn Thompson, Pat Eaton-Robb, Steve LeBlanc, Michael Casey, Kathy McCormack, Bruce Shipkowski, Ron Todt and Michael Rubinkam of The Associated Press.

HARTFORD, Conn. — A quick-moving winter storm battered cities in the Northeast with snowfall, sending huge waves crashing into the New England coastline and forcing New York City schools into glitch-filled remote learning reminiscen­t of the early days of the pandemic.

Airlines canceled or delayed flights while accidents were reported on slippery roads. At least one person died.

The storm quickly passed through the region, producing snowfall totals that were significan­t in some cities but much less than expected in others. New York City recorded just 3 inches of snow in Central Park, but areas of Pennsylvan­ia and Connecticu­t were blanketed with 15 inches of fluffy snow, according to National Weather Service reports.

“It’s been a quiet winter, so it’s kind of welcoming,” Ricky Smith said as he made his way to a constructi­on job in New York City. “I just hope nobody gets hurt.”

In New York City, the nation’s largest school district opted to shift to remote learning instead of giving students and staff a snow day, sparking criticism by many. And when classes began, technical problems prevented many of the 915,000 students from logging in, exacerbati­ng the discontent.

PS 112 in East Harlem had a promising start to its virtual school day with a schoolwide read-aloud, teacher Jessica Roach said. But the rest of the morning, when teachers and families tried to access the district’s domain, cascading technical problems confused her special education students and inconvenie­nced their parents.

“A lot of kids lost out because of technical issues,” she said.

Chong Bretillon, a parent in Queens, said she received repeated errors as she tried to gain entry to a Zoom room for her elementary school student, while messaging with dozens of other parents who were encounteri­ng the same problems.

“I just spent almost an hour trying to log in and log out,” Bretillon said. “Everyone’s frustrated.”

New York Mayor Eric Adams defended the decision to go remote in the schools, saying it was necessary because of learning losses during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

School officials blamed the troubles on IBM, with Schools Chancellor David Banks saying the company “was not ready for primetime.”

IBM said in a statement Tuesday afternoon that it worked with the schools and the issues “were largely resolved,” but the company did not immediatel­y respond to questions about what specifical­ly happened and why. City officials said there were problems with authentica­tion services.

More than 1,000 flights were canceled Tuesday morning, mostly at the airports in the New York City area and Boston. Accidents were reported across the region and several states banned tandem and empty tractor-trailers from highways.

There were more than 145,000 power outages reported Tuesday morning in Pennsylvan­ia and several thousand in New Jersey, but few outages in New York and New England, according to the tracking site poweroutag­e.us.

Authoritie­s in Newberry Township, Pa., said a man operating a snowmobile was killed when he hit a downed utility line around 8 a.m. Tuesday during the storm. The cause and manner of death were pending further investigat­ion.

At the time of the incident , police said in a statement that the area was “experienci­ng a multitude of weather-related conditions due to a winter storm which caused downed trees, downed power lines and hazardous travel conditions throughout the area.”

Robert Bylone, 51, a university research operations manager from Orwigsburg, Pa., was at home around 6 a.m. Tuesday when he heard a “splinterin­g crack” outside his window. A 30-year-old flowering pear tree in his front yard had come down.

“We anticipate­d a snowstorm, and sure enough, we got it,” he said. “But it was quick, very wet with a lot of moisture in the snow. So with that much water in the snow, it was very heavy. Very heavy to pick up, very heavy on the tree branches.”

Throughout the region, officials urged people to take precaution­s including staying off the roads.

In Connecticu­t, Gov. Ned Lamont ordered all executive branch office buildings closed to the public for the day and all state courts were closed.

Ahead of the storm, Massachuse­tts Gov. Maura Healey told all non-essential executive branch employees to not report to work Tuesday. Boston schools were closed and a parking ban was in effect until 4 p.m. Similar closures and bans were put in place in other cities and towns.

 ?? (AP/Frank Franklin II) ?? A man walks near a plane as snow falls Tuesday at John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport in New York. More photos at arkansason­line.com/214winterw­eather/.
(AP/Frank Franklin II) A man walks near a plane as snow falls Tuesday at John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport in New York. More photos at arkansason­line.com/214winterw­eather/.
 ?? (AP/Matt Rourke) ?? A person cleans snow off a car Tuesday in Philadelph­ia.
(AP/Matt Rourke) A person cleans snow off a car Tuesday in Philadelph­ia.

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