Springfield News-Sun

U.S. East Coast preps for coming blizzard

- By Philip Marcelo

BOSTON — Last-minute shoppers cleared grocery shelves and raided snowblower dealers Friday along the U.S. East Coast ahead of a storm expected to drop heavy, fast-falling snow on some of the nation’s biggest metro areas, including Philadelph­ia, New York and Boston.

Officials from Virginia to Massachuse­tts rushed to declare snow emergencie­s, impose parking bans and restrict travel in advance of a system expected to drop wet snow at rates as high as 5 inches per hour. The storm threatened blizzard conditions and coastal flooding in some areas.

Merrick Mccormack was among hundreds who packed a Shaw’s Supermarke­t in Warwick, Rhode Island, with the entire state under a blizzard warning and officials mobilizing more than 500 snowplows.

“I don’t fuss with storms.

I know in a couple of days, we’re going to be free and clear. No need to panic,” the 51-year-old Cranston resident said, flashing some New England stoicism as he unloaded his groceries.

Regional supermarke­t giant Stop & Shop pleaded with customers to practice restraint, warning that staffing and supply woes caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic will mean barer shelves and longer checkout lines.

“We ask shoppers to buy what they need and save some for their neighbors,” the grocery chain said in a statement.

By midday Friday, airlines had canceled more than 1,000 flights in the U.S. and had already scrubbed about 2,500 scheduled for Saturday, according to the tracking service Flightawar­e. The hardest-hit airports included those serving Chicago, New York City and Boston.

Amtrak canceled or limited weekend train service along its busy corridor from Washington to Boston.

The storm was forecast to begin in parts of the Carolinas and Appalachia on Friday evening, according to the National Weather Service.

The system was expected to intensify as a nor’easter and bring the snow Saturday up into New England, where forecaster­s warned of up to 20 inches and wind gusts as high as 60 mph. Some isolated spots could see nearly 3 feet of snow.

Officials warned of near-whiteout conditions.

The common refrain from New York Gov. Kathy Hochul and other state executives: “Just stay off the roads.”

In Maryland, Gov. Larry Hogan mobilized the state National Guard, with parts of the state’s Eastern Shore expecting up to a foot of snow. Washington could see 1 to 3 inches of snow.

In Virginia, where a blizzard this month stranded hundreds of motorists for hours on Interstate 95, Gov. Glenn Youngkin said officials had already begun positionin­g resources in anticipati­on of toppled trees and power outages and possible tidal flooding.

Similar weather was expected up to the Philadelph­ia and New York City areas. Seaside communitie­s from the Jersey Shore to suburban Long Island and southeaste­rn Connecticu­t could see higher snowfall rates and stronger winds than the big cities.

About 1,800 snowplows were ready for deployment in New York City, and workers were already spreading salt on hundreds of miles of streets ahead of the storm, Sanitation Commission­er Edward Grayson said.

Some New England officials fretted about a shortage of snowplow drivers.

Connecticu­t Transporta­tion Commission­er Joseph Giulietti said Friday his staffing is down about 30% this weekend because of COVID19 and other issues.

The state expects to have more than 600 plow and sanding trucks out along with additional contractor­s, but with anticipate­d snowfall rates of 5 inches an hour, it might not be enough, he said.

“It depends on the length of the storm,” Giulietti said. “Because these people have to keep circling and going back out on the routes.”

Across the Northeast, the shelf-clearing rush for bread, eggs, milk and other staples was well underway Friday at grocery stores.

At the Star Market in Cambridge, Marc Rudkowski was among those practicall­y giddy at the prospect of a weekend snowed in. The 28-year-old machine learning engineer stocked up on French bread and wine, as well as balloons and toys for his puppy, who turned 1 on Friday.

“He’s going to love it. He’s a snow dog,” Rudkowski said.

 ?? AP ?? A man steps over a flood barrier at the entrance to a building on Long Wharf, Friday in Boston. Residents and officials in the Northeast and mid-atlantic regions of the U.S. were bracing for a powerful winter storm.
AP A man steps over a flood barrier at the entrance to a building on Long Wharf, Friday in Boston. Residents and officials in the Northeast and mid-atlantic regions of the U.S. were bracing for a powerful winter storm.

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