Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Late-winter storm blankets Northeast and Deep South

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A late-winter storm blasted the northeaste­rn United States on Saturday with high winds and snow that could pile up to a foot high, sending temperatur­es plummeting and making travel hazardous after first taking aim at the Deep South.

The National Weather Service said 7 to 12 inches could be expected in northern areas of Pennsylvan­ia and New York with winds gusting as high as 45 mph. Philadelph­ia residents, while expecting only a few inches of snow, were warned that blizzard-like conditions were possible at one point, and later a flash freeze was possible with wet surfaces rapidly becoming icy due to plummeting temperatur­es.

Gale warnings were in effect in coastal New Jersey and Delaware areas, with gusts of 40 to 50 mph possible and forecaster­s warning of tree damage and resulting power outages as well as rough boating conditions. A wind advisory was in effect for other areas.

Meteorolog­ist Andrew Orrison of the weather service office in College Park, Maryland, said moderate to heavy snow had fallen over “a rather large area” of the eastern United States, but the storm was moving quickly to the northeast.

Parts of the Tennessee Valley and central Appalachia had already seen as much as 8 to 12 inches of snow, and areas of Pennsylvan­ia, New York and northern New England were expected to receive similar amounts before the storm pulled away early Sunday, he said. By Saturday afternoon, 10 inches of snow or more had been reported in parts of New York and northern Pennsylvan­ia and as much as 6 inches in eastern Pennsylvan­ia.

Intensifyi­ng low pressure accompanyi­ng the storm had been generating high winds, and plunging temperatur­es would freeze any moisture on roadways, making for hazardous travel in icy conditions, he said.

State police said Saturday afternoon that a crash involving 73 vehicles on a central Pennsylvan­ia highway had resulted in multiple injuries, but no life-threatenin­g injuries were immediatel­y reported. Trooper Megan Ammerman said the crash was reported shortly after 2 p.m. Saturday in Cumberland County.

The cause of the crash and other details weren’t immediatel­y available. WCAU-TV reported that temperatur­es in the area ranged from the lower to mid-20s, well below freezing, with winds gusting to 30 to 40 mph resulting in reduced visibility.

PPL reported more than 10,750 customers without power in eastern and central Pennsylvan­ia by mid-afternoon Saturday but that had dropped to 5,000 hours later. FirstEnerg­y reported 10,350 customer

outages in Pennsylvan­ia and New York but that had been reduced to 7,650 later in the day.

The system also brought snow and rain to several southern states, including Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and Mississipp­i, on Friday and Saturday. Parts of northern Mississipp­i and portions of the Mississipp­i Delta also saw between 2 and 3.5 inches of snow.

Several inches of snow fell in eastern Tennessee, delaying by at least a day the season opening of Dollywood in Pigeon Forge.

In Knoxville, the annual St. Patrick’s Day Parade was canceled and several inches of snow in the middle of the state contribute­d to multiple crashes on interstate highways.

A number of St. Patrick’s Day parades were postponed elsewhere, including events scheduled in Albany, New York, and Erie and Scranton, Pennsylvan­ia, as well as suburban Philadelph­ia. The parade scheduled Sunday in the city of Philadelph­ia was still scheduled to go on. The holiday falls on Thursday this year.

 ?? JESSICA HILL/AP ?? Jason Meyers throws a flying disc for his dog Gilroy during a snowstorm on Saturday in Burlington, Vermont. A late-winter storm hammered the Northeast.
JESSICA HILL/AP Jason Meyers throws a flying disc for his dog Gilroy during a snowstorm on Saturday in Burlington, Vermont. A late-winter storm hammered the Northeast.

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