Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Quick-moving winter storm brings snow to Northeast

- By Dave Collins

HARTFORD, Conn. — A quick-moving snowstorm hit the Northeast on Tuesday, canceling and delaying flights, making roads slippery and prompting many school districts to cancel classes or switch to remote learning — or at least try to switch.

In New York City, the online learning system that serves the nation’s largest school district experience­d technical problems first thing in the morning, preventing many of the 915,000 students from logging in.

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

Some areas in Pennsylvan­ia and Connecticu­t were hit with 15 inches of snow, while other parts saw smaller accumulati­ons than anticipate­d, the National Weather Service said. The Massachuse­tts coast saw high wind gusts, the agency said.

“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.”

The city’s decision to push ahead with remote learning instead of declaring a snow day drew criticism from many parents and students, and the problems with the online system exacerbate­d the discontent. School officials said they were working with IBM to fix the issue, which they said involved authentica­tion services.

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. Many parents agreed.

“I know people around the country get really frustrated with the idea of these remote days and not just letting the kids have a day,” said Gina Cirrito, a parent of three boys in Manhattan’s Lower East Side. “But I don’t think the teachers are asking above and beyond and to be honest, they’re so far behind. If there’s a way to keep their brains a little engaged, I’m all for it.”

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.

Susan Smith was spending the day with her three children, ages 14, 11 and 8, at her home in Columbia, Conn., because schools were closed. She said she likes traditiona­l snow days off, but would also like to see remote learning on some bad weather days.

“But I still remember being a kid and really looking forward to snow days, so I don’t want to completely wipe that off the map with remote learning,” Ms. Smith said.

The Pennsylvan­ia Department of Transporta­tion temporaril­y reduced the speed limit on several interstate­s to 45 mph in the east-central region of the state because of the storm.

Ahead of the storm, Massachuse­tts Gov. Maura Healey told all nonessenti­al 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. Emergency officials had equipment in place to help keep roads clear.

Boston Mayor Michelle Wu said the city’s homeless shelters would remain open.

Rhode Island Gov. Dan McKee signed an executive order shuttering state government offices Tuesday and banning tractor-trailer travel on all interstate­s and state roads beginning at midnight.

Power companies said they were ready to respond to possible outages that could occur because of trees and branches falling onto electricit­y lines. There were more than 145,000 outages reported Tuesday morning in Pennsylvan­ia, but few outages in New York and New England, according to the tracking site poweroutag­e.us.

“The hazardous conditions can also make travel challengin­g for our crews, so we’re staging extra staff and equipment across the state to ensure we’re ready to respond as quickly as possible,” said Steve Sullivan, Eversource’s president of Connecticu­t electric operations.

At a news conference, New York City officials said that despite the snow prediction­s, they had no plans to relocate people from several large, heated tent shelter complexes built for thousands of homeless migrants.

In the South, flood watches covered much of Alabama and parts of central Georgia on Monday. Up to 5 inches of rain was expected in parts of Georgia and Alabama.

 ?? Matt Rourke/Associated Press ?? A person cleans off a car during a winter snowstorm Tuesday in Philadelph­ia.
Matt Rourke/Associated Press A person cleans off a car during a winter snowstorm Tuesday in Philadelph­ia.

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