The Palm Beach Post

Nor’easter, blizzard conditions hit Boston

New England gets third huge storm; power out again.

- By Alanna Durkin Richer

BOSTON — A nor’easter that could deliver up to 2 feet of snow to some areas socked New England on Tuesday, bringing blizzard conditions to parts of coastal Massachuse­tts, covering highways with snow and knocking out power to tens of thousands.

A blizzard was confirmed in Boston, as well as parts of Massachuse­tts’ South Shore and Cape Cod. Blizzard warnings were issued for the entire coast of Maine, New Hampshire and most of Massachuse­tts.

The rest of New England was under a winter storm warning, and a winter weather advisory blanketed most of New York and portions of New Jersey, Pennsylvan­ia, West Virginia and North Carolina.

Although the latest storm was not expected to bring as many power outages as a nor’easter last week because the snow is lighter and fluffier, more than 150,000 customers in Massachuse­tts lost power by late Tuesday morning.

The Boston-area public transit system operated on a limited weekday basis. Usually-packed subway trains were nearly empty as many workers stayed home and schools closed.

Joe Rotella ducked into a train station as he tried to find his way to a hotel that’s hosting a convention where he’s speaking. Organizers were scrambling to find ways to video conference in speakers whose planes were delayed or canceled, said Rotella, chief medical officer with the American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine.

“As a visitor to Boston, I’ve been looking forward to this for months and this is kind of an adventure for me,” the Louisville, Kentucky, man said. “I didn’t have to go through the last two nor’easters so this still feels like fun.”

The storm was expected to last through most of Tuesday, disrupting road and air travel.

The flight-tracking site FlightAwar­e reported more than 1,300 canceled flights within, into or out of the U.S. on Tuesday. Amtrak suspended all service Tuesday from Boston to New York’s Penn Station.

At the Yotel hotel in Boston’s Seaport neighborho­od, guests were busy rescheduli­ng their flights over breakfast or, in the case of 80-yearold Roy Zaloom of Ramsey, New Jersey, preparing for a morning drive back home with his family.

“Let’s’ hope this is the end of it, the end of the snow. We’ve had too much of it at one time,” said Zaloom, recalling that he got a foot in New Jersey last week.

The weather service defines a blizzard as three or more hours of sustained wind or frequent gusts to 35 mph or greater; and falling or blowing snow that reduces visibility frequently to less than one-quarter of a mile.

Boston and eastern Massachuse­tts, as well as Rhode Island, could get a foot and a half of snow, with less to the west of the city.

 ?? SCOTT EISEN / GETTY IMAGES ?? A snow plow clears a road as Winter Storm Skylar bears down on Boston on Tuesday, delivering up to 2 feet of snow. This is the third nor’easter to hit in less than two weeks. Power outages are not quite as widespread.
SCOTT EISEN / GETTY IMAGES A snow plow clears a road as Winter Storm Skylar bears down on Boston on Tuesday, delivering up to 2 feet of snow. This is the third nor’easter to hit in less than two weeks. Power outages are not quite as widespread.

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