More
climate chaos.
On
Monday, additional severe weather may bring more misery, with
freezing rain and more snow predicted that would make the trip home
for evening commuters even more difficult.
FRESH STORM BREWING
Northeast
digs out from blizzard: 9 dead, thousands without power
The
Northeast started digging out on Sunday after a blizzard dumped up to
40 inches (1 meter) of snow with hurricane force winds, killing at
least nine people and leaving hundreds of thousands without power.
10 February, 2013
New York City trucks plowed through residential streets, piling snow even higher at the edges and leaving thousands of motorists to dig their buried vehicles out from mountains of snow.
"I give up," Giovanni Marchenna, 52, of Manhattan said with a laugh.
"Looks like I'll be taking the subway to work until the snow melts," he added, noting he spent more than an hour shoveling snow.
"It
will make it a little more hazardous and a little more slick on the
roads," said Kenneth James, a National Weather Service
meteorologist based in Maryland.
In
Boston, Mayor Tom Menino canceled school on Monday after touring
neighborhoods throughout the city, where 2 feet of snow fell.
"Our
No. 1 priority today is getting to the side streets," he said,
saying it was the fifth-deepest snowfall ever in the city.
Utility
companies reported that some 350,000 customers were still without
electricity across nine states after the wet, heavy snow brought down
tree branches and power lines. About 700,000 homes and businesses
were without power at one point on Saturday.
Air
traffic began to return to normal on Sunday after some 5,800 flights
were canceled on Friday and Saturday, according to Flightaware, a
flight-tracking service.
Bradley
International Airport in Windsor Locks, Connecticut, and New York
state's Long Island MacArthur Airport reopened on Sunday morning.
Both had been closed on Saturday.
Boston's
Logan International Airport reopened late on Saturday, according to
the Federal Aviation Administration.
Rare
travel bans in Connecticut and Massachusetts were lifted but roads
throughout the region remained treacherous, according to state
transportation departments.
Cambridge,
Massachusetts, residents were digging out their cars and driveways
under clear blue skies on Sunday afternoon.
Charles
Damico, a retired electrical engineer who was clearing his driveway
with a snowblower, said the snow was "nothing" compared to
the amount he remembers falling during the blizzard of 1978 that
dumped between 2 and 4 feet of snow on the region.
"I
didn't have a snowblower at that time, so everything was done by
hand," he said. "This is nothing compared to it."
As
the region recovered, another large winter storm building across the
Northern Plains was expected to leave a footof snow and bring high
winds from Colorado to central Minnesota into Monday, the National
Weather Service said.
FRESH STORM BREWING
South
Dakota was expected to be hardest hit, with winds reaching 50 miles
per hour, creating white-out conditions. The storm was expected to
reach parts of Nebraska, North Dakota, Wyoming and Wisconsin.
South
Dakota officials closed a 150-mile (240-km) stretch of Interstate 90
in the center of the state. They also closed 75 miles of Interstate
29 in the state's northeastern corner near North Dakota.
Officials
said motels and other facilities along Interstate 90 were filling up
with travelers trying to avoid the heavy drifting and near-zero
visibility.
"Travel
will be difficult to impossible at times on other highways in many
areas of South Dakota," state transportation officials said in a
statement.
Friday
and Saturday's mammoth storm stretched from the Great Lakes to the
Atlantic and covered several spots in the Northeast with more than 3
feet of snow. Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts took the
brunt of the blizzard.
The
Connecticut town of Hamden had 40 inches and nearby Milford 38
inches, the National Weather Service said.
New
York Governor Andrew Cuomo said on Sunday that 675 pieces of
equipment and 975 personnel had been dispatched to help Suffolk
County, making up the eastern half of Long Island, dig out of 3 feet
of snow.
"Suffolk
County has not seen a winter storm like Nemo in years, and the
massive amount of snow left behind effectively shut down the entire
region," Cuomo said in a statement, referring to the Weather
Channel's name for the storm.
SOME
TRANSIT STILL SUSPENDED
Amtrak
said it planned to run a limited service between New York and Boston
on Sunday and a regular Sunday schedule from New York to the state
capital in Albany.
The
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority said it planned to resume
limited service on Sunday afternoon.
The
Rhode Island Public Transit Authority and Connecticut Transit said
service would remain suspended on Sunday.
Stratford,
Connecticut, Mayor John Harkins told WTNH television on Saturday that
snow had fallen at a rate of 6 inches an hour and even plows were
getting stuck.
The
storm dropped 31.9 inches of snow on Portland, Maine, breaking a 1979
record, the weather service said. Winds gusted to 83 miles per hour
at Cuttyhunk, New York, and brought down trees across the region.
The
storm contributed to at least five deaths in Connecticut and two each
in New York state and Boston, authorities said. A motorist in New
Hampshire also died when he went off a road but authorities said his
health may have been a factor in the crash.
The
two deaths in Boston were separate incidents of carbon monoxide
poisoning in cars, an 11-year-old boy and a man in his early 20s. The
boy had climbed into the family car to keep warm while his father
cleared snow. The engine was running but the exhaust was blocked,
said authorities.
There
were also road rescues along the Long Island Expressway from Friday
night to Saturday morning, some using snowmobiles. A baby girl was
delivered early on Saturday by emergency services personnel in
Worcester, Massachusetts.
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