USA TODAY International Edition

Polar plunge: Record cold follows storm

Wind gusts wreak havoc on trees, power lines

- John Bacon and Doyle Rice Contributi­ng: Ben Mutzabaugh

High winds and brutally cold temperatur­es greeted brave souls armed with shovels digging out Monday from up to 2 feet of snow that fell across a wide swath of the nation.

“In some cases, temperatur­es may plummet 40 degrees,” AccuWeathe­r meteorolog­ist Alex Sosnowski said.

The storm has been blamed for three deaths across the country.

Adding to the temperatur­e troubles: wind gusts of up to 50 mph, capable of knocking down tree limbs and electrical lines and disrupting power.

Temperatur­es across the Northeast were forecast to dip about 20 degrees below average for the time of year. The entire state of Michigan was below zero early Monday, and the wind chill temperatur­e in Rudyard dipped to 46 degrees below, the National Weather Service reported.

At wind chills that low, frostbite can occur in as little as 10 minutes.

Boston’s high temperatur­e for Monday was forecast to reach only about 9 degrees, ranking it among the 20 coldest January days ever recorded in a city that began keeping track of such things in 1872, weather.us meteorolog­ist Ryan Maue said.

There were some gains for travelers in the skies. Nationwide, only about 315 flights had been canceled Monday and another 1,130 delayed as of 10 a.m. ET, according to FlightAwar­e.com. That’s an improvemen­t – more than 1,600 flights were canceled Sunday and another 2,165 Saturday.

Sosnowski said some areas from Ohio to Maine could see snow drifts of up to 10 feet, and the severe blowing and drifting could limit travel and delay crews trying to dig out.

The highest snow total from the storm was the 29.2 inches that fell near Rochester, New York.

Newry, Maine, was digging out from 16 inches of snow Monday. But anyone out with a shovel was battling a wind chill of 21 degrees below zero and wind gusts of 20 mph.

“Roads cleared by accumulati­ng snow during the storm may become blocked again due to extensive drifting snow in the storm’s wake through Monday,” Sosnowski said.

Winds are expected to ease in the East on Tuesday, but the cold will remain. By then the Midwest will see a brief reprieve, but the next wave of cold will bring more storms.

 ??  ?? Ben Jennings snowblows his driveway on Sunday, in Glenville, N.Y., where 16 inches of snow fell. MARY ESCH/AP
Ben Jennings snowblows his driveway on Sunday, in Glenville, N.Y., where 16 inches of snow fell. MARY ESCH/AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States