Miami Herald

‘A long two days’ as snow pummels Northeast

- BY JENNIFER PELTZ AND KAREN MATTHEWS

A sprawling, lumbering winter storm walloped the Eastern U.S. on Monday, shutting down coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n sites, closing schools and halting transit as snow piled up from the Appalachia­ns to New England,

with the heaviest accumulati­ons yet to come in some places.

With flakes falling since Sunday evening, the National Weather Service said more than 13 inches of snow had fallen in Manhattan’s Central Park as of 1 p.m., and as much as 16 inches was reported in northern New Jersey. Although the heaviest parts of the storm had moved through the metropolit­an area by Monday evening, lighter snow showers were expected to continue virtually all day Tuesday, forecaster James Tomasini said.

“We’re looking at a long two days here,” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said at a virtual news conference.

Parts of New England also braced for a foot or more by the time the snow finally tapers off in the northernmo­st states by Wednesday evening, the weather service said. At least three deaths that appeared to be related to the storm were reported, in Pennsylvan­ia.

In Pennsylvan­ia, authoritie­s said a 67-year-old woman with Alzheimer’s disease who reportedly wandered away from her home was

found dead of hypothermi­a on an Allentown street Monday morning. About 60 miles north in Plains Township, a shooting after an argument over snow removal killed a married couple, and the suspect was later found dead at his nearby home of a wound believed to have been self-inflicted, officials in Luzerne County said.

A preliminar­y investigat­ion indicates the people involved had a long-running conflict, but “this morning, the dispute was exacerbate­d by a disagreeme­nt over snow disposal,” District Attorney Stefanie Salavantis said.

In Virginia, four firefighte­rs were taken to hospitals with injuries that were not life-threatenin­g after their firetruck overturned Sunday on snow-covered roads in Henrico County, The Richmond Times-Dispatch

reported.

Across the Northeast, many coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n sites closed Monday.

Connecticu­t Gov. Ned Lamont said the storm forced the postponeme­nt of about 10,000 shots and delayed the state’s weekly resupply of vaccine, now expected Tuesday. He urged providers that called off vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts to extend their hours if needed to reschedule the shots by the end of the week.

The storm disrupted the second phase of Massachuse­tts’ vaccine rollout as a Boston site that was supposed to open Monday for residents ages 75 and over did not; some other mass vaccinatio­n sites were open. The state was expected to get 12 to 18 inches of heavy, wet snow and wind gusts of up to 55 mph along the coast, according to Gov. Charlie Baker.

 ?? MARK LENNIHAN AP ?? A couple walks on the Brooklyn Bridge on Monday in New York.
MARK LENNIHAN AP A couple walks on the Brooklyn Bridge on Monday in New York.
 ?? WARREN RUDA The Hazleton Standard-Speaker via AP ?? Ten-year-old Isabella Molli enjoys the snow in Hazleton, Pa., on Monday.
WARREN RUDA The Hazleton Standard-Speaker via AP Ten-year-old Isabella Molli enjoys the snow in Hazleton, Pa., on Monday.

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