Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Northeast hit again

Region faces another blizzard

- DAVE COLLINS AND MARINA VILLENEUVE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Another winter blast of snow and strong winds moved into the Northeast on Sunday to the delight of some and the consternat­ion of others, just days after the biggest storm of the season dumped up to 19 inches of snow in the region.

Winter storm warnings were in effect into Monday from upstate New York to Maine, where blizzard conditions and 2 feet of snow are possible. Other snowfall forecasts ranged from up to 20 inches in Ports-closed mouth, N.H., to up to 11 inches in Boston to up to 7 inches in Hartford, Conn., and Providence, R.I.

Wind gusts of more than 50 mph, coastal flooding and power outages could hit parts of the region. A blizzard watch was in effect on Cape Cod, with a storm surge of 1 to 3 feet possible, according to the National Weather Service.

“It is a dangerous storm because of high winds, low visibility and heavy snow,” said Lenore Correia, a weather service meteorolog­ist in Taunton, Mass. “It’s a big snowstorm, but nothing we haven’t seen before either.”

Roads were slick. Schools across the region announced they would be Monday. Nearly 1,300 flights in the U.S. were canceled and another 5,600 were delayed, according to the flight tracking service FlightAwar­e.

It was a stark contrast to record warmth elsewhere. In southwest Oklahoma, the temperatur­e reached 99 degrees Saturday to tie a record for the highest February temperatur­e set in 1918.

In Bedford, Mass., a small plane with five people aboard aborted takeoff and slid off a runway Sunday at Hanscom Field about 20 miles northwest of Boston. No one was injured.

Also in Bedford, a 60year-old man was struck and killed by a snowplow in the parking lot of a Veterans Affairs hospital.

 ??  ?? A pedestrian crosses the street during a snowstorm Sunday in Waltham, Mass. Parts of the Northeast could get up to 2 feet of snow.
A pedestrian crosses the street during a snowstorm Sunday in Waltham, Mass. Parts of the Northeast could get up to 2 feet of snow.

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