From Yahoo/AP:
“Winter storm tracks east,
hitting during morning commute”
(A worker clears snow in New
York's Times Square, Friday, Jan. 7, 2022. A winter storm that has already left
areas of the south with more than 6 inches of snow moved into the northeast
during the morning commute and prompted many school districts to close for the
day.)
A winter storm that has already
left areas of the South with more than 6 inches (15 centimeters) of snow moved
into the Northeast on Friday during the morning commute and prompted many
school districts to close for the day. Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker urged
people to stay off the roads and take public transportation if possible, as the
storm was forecast to drop as much as a foot of snow in coastal areas of the
state. There were already 12 inches (30 centimeters) of snow in Hebron,
Connecticut and 10 inches (25 centimeters) in Burrillville, Rhode Island by 8
a.m., according to National Weather Service spotters. Schools in Boston closed,
and Providence, Rhode Island, public schools switched to distance learning, but
New York City kept the nation’s largest public school system open. “Children
need to be in school. We don’t have any more days to waste” after the many
closures and remote-learning days of the pandemic, said New York Mayor Eric
Adams, a Democrat dealing with his first major storm after taking office Saturday.
He said he was also mindful of children who rely on in-school meals and working
parents who can’t stay home.
Officials urged caution on the
roads and reduced speed limits in some areas, but there were multiple reports
of crashes across the region. A commuter bus spun out of control and wound up
blocking multiple lanes on the Massachusetts Turnpike just outside Boston early
Friday. No injuries were reported, but the bus caused a huge traffic jam. A
tractor-trailer jackknifed in Greenwich, Connecticut, and forced a temporary
closure of Interstate 95 southbound, state police said. New Jersey Gov. Phil
Murphy on Thursday night declared a state of emergency for the entire state and
delayed opening state offices for nonessential employees until 11 a.m. The
storm also affected coronavirus testing sites, many of which have been
overwhelmed with long lines and waits for days. Some testing sites in Rhode
Island delayed their openings until later in the day, when the storm was
expected to start tapering off. Testing sites in Connecticut closed. Philadelphia
and Newark Liberty International airports reported many flights were canceled
or delayed. Airports across the Northeast advised travelers to check with their
airlines.
From late Thursday through Friday
afternoon, 4 to 7 inches (10 to 18 centimeters) of snow were expected in parts
of central and southern New Hampshire, and south-central and southwest Maine,
according to the weather service. The storm brought record-setting snow to some
areas of the South on Thursday. Nashville saw 6.3 inches (16 centimeters) of
snowfall Thursday, shattering the city’s previous Jan. 6 record of 4 inches (10
centimeters) that had stood since 1977, the National Weather Service said.
Freezing rain and sleet coated areas around the Tennessee-Alabama state border,
said Scott Unger, a meteorologist for the service in Nashville. Kentucky Gov.
Andy Beshear closed state offices at noon Thursday and later extended the
closure through Friday. The largest snowfall in Kentucky by Thursday evening
was 8 to 9 inches (20 to 23 centimeters) in a swath from Elizabethtown to
Bardstown and Nicholasville to Lexington, said meteorologist Brian Schoettmer
of the weather service's Louisville office. Eastern Kentucky recorded 6 to 8
inches (15 to 20 centimeters), and far western Kentucky had about 3 inches (8
centimeters).
^ We are getting snow up here
too. ^
https://news.yahoo.com/winter-storm-tracks-east-hitting-141244984.html?fr=sycsrp_catchall
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