Dayton Daily News

Blizzard buffets East Coast with snow, winds, flooding

- By Mark Pratt and Mike Catalini

A nor’easter with hurricane-force wind gusts battered much of the East Coast on Saturday, flinging heavy snow that made travel treacherou­s or impossible, flooding coastlines, and threatenin­g to leave bitter cold in its wake.

The storm thrashed parts of 10 states, with blizzard warnings that stretched from Virginia to Maine. Phila- delphia and New York saw plenty of wind and snow, but Boston was in the cross- hairs. The city could get more than 2 feet of snow by the time it moves out early Sunday.

Winds gusted as high as 83 mph on Cape Cod in Massachuse­tts. More than 22 inches of snow had fallen by midafterno­on on part of Long Island in New York, while Bayville, New Jersey, had 19 inches.

The wind scoured the ground bare in some spots and piled the snow into huge drifts in others.

Forecaster­s watched closely for new snowfall records, especially in Boston, where the heaviest snow was expected later Satur- day. The Boston area’s modern snowfall record is 27.6 inches, set in 2003.

New York City and Phila- delphia were far from setting all-time records but still saw significan­t snowfall, with at least 7.5 inches in New York’s Central Park and at the Phil- adelphia airport.

Many flights at airports serving New York, Boston and Philadelph­ia were canceled Saturday, according to FlightAwar­e. More than 4,500 flights were canceled across the U.S., though air- ports in the Northeast didn’t report evidence of mass strandings, given that the storm was anticipate­d and many airlines called off flights in advance.

Amtrak canceled all its high-speed Acela trains on the busy Boston-to-Washington corridor and canceled or limited other service.

In Boston, Dominic Torre was out driving his snow dump truck since the storm began overnight, picking up loads of plowed snow from the streets of and dump- ing it in unused parking lots known as “snow farms.” It was about time for such a big storm, he said.

“You know, we were over- due,” he said. “It’s pretty hairy, you know, a lot of snow. A lot of snow, a lot of trips, a lot of loads. And it ain’t over yet. It ain’t done yet.”

Videos on social media showed wind and waves battering North Weymouth, south of Boston, flooding streets with a slurry of frigid water. Other videos showed a street underwater on Nantucket and waves crashing against the windows of a building in Plymouth.

Over 120,000 homes and businesses lost power in Massachuse­tts, with failures mounting. No other states reported widespread outages.

Climate change, partic- ularly the warming ocean, probably influenced the strength of the storm, atmo- spheric researcher­s said.

Much warmer ocean waters “are certainly playing a role in the strengthen- ing of the storm system and increased moisture available for the storm,” said University of Oklahoma meteorol- ogy professor Jason Furtado. “But it isn’t the only thing.”

The storm had two saving graces: Dry snow less capable of snapping trees and tearing down power lines, and its timing on a weekend, when schools were closed and few people were commuting.

Parts of 10 states were under blizzard warnings at some point: Maine, New Hampshire, Massachuse­tts, Rhode Island, Connecticu­t, New York and New Jersey, along with much of the Delmarva Peninsula in Delaware, Maryland and Virginia.

The National Weather Service considers a storm a bliz- zard if it has snowfall or blowing snow, as well as winds of at least 35 mph that reduce visibility to a quarter-mile or less for at least three hours. In many areas, Saturday’s storm met those criteria.

 ?? KATHERINE TAYLOR / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A snow plow moves snow out of a roadway during a storm Saturday in Boston.
KATHERINE TAYLOR / THE NEW YORK TIMES A snow plow moves snow out of a roadway during a storm Saturday in Boston.

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