From News Nation:
“100K+ without power in
Northeast after powerful blizzard”
(People cross Congress Street,
Saturday, Jan. 29, 2022, in Boston. Forecasters watched closely for new
snowfall records, especially in Boston, where the heaviest snow was expected
late Saturday.)
Gusty winds and falling
temperatures have plunged the East Coast into a deep freeze as people dig out
after a powerful nor’easter dumped mounds of snow, flooded coastlines and
knocked out power to tens of thousands. Dangerous wind chills have fallen below
zero in many locations across the region on Sunday after the storm dumped snow
from Virginia to Maine. Philadelphia and New York had plenty of snow, but
Massachusetts bore the brunt of the storm, with the town of Sharon getting more
than 30 inches of snow before the storm moved out. The wind continued raging as
over 100,000 lost power, mostly in Massachusetts, hampering crews’ ability to
work on overhead lines. No other states reported widespread outages.
Winds gusted as high as 83 mph on
Cape Cod in Massachusetts. It scoured the ground bare in some spots and piled
the snow into huge drifts in others. Coastal towns flooded, with wind and waves
battering North Weymouth, south of Boston, flooding streets with a slurry of
frigid water, according to video posted on social media. Other videos showed a
street underwater on Nantucket and waves crashing against the windows of a
building in Plymouth. Forecasters watched closely for new snowfall records,
especially in Boston. The Boston area’s modern snowfall record for a winter
storm is 27.6 inches, set in 2003. The city tied its record for biggest
single-day snowfall on Saturday, with 23.6 inches, the National Weather Service
said.
Boston resident Jesse Ledin owns
a home-goods rental business startup. He was out walking his dog in the storm,
wearing ski goggles Saturday as he navigated gingerly through huge snow drifts
and painful wind gusts. “It’s pretty intense with the winds getting up to 70
miles an hour. As for the depth, it’s pretty deep in spots with the wind and
the snow drifts, but it’s pretty nasty out and I definitely wouldn’t want to be
driving. So it’s nice to be able to walk through these huge snowdrifts and in
pretty tough conditions,” Ledin said. Climate change, particularly the warming
ocean, probably influenced the strength of the storm, atmospheric researchers
said. Much warmer ocean waters “are certainly playing a role in the strengthening
of the storm system and increased moisture available for the storm,” said
University of Oklahoma meteorology professor Jason Furtado. “But it isn’t the
only thing.”
The storm had two saving graces:
Dry snow less capable of snapping trees and tearing down power lines, and its
timing on a weekend, when schools were closed and few people were commuting. Parts
of 10 states were under blizzard warnings at some point: Maine, New Hampshire,
Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York and New Jersey, along with
much of the Delmarva Peninsula in Delaware, Maryland and Virginia. The National
Weather Service considers a storm a blizzard if it has snowfall or blowing
snow, as well as winds of at least 35 mph that reduce visibility to a
quarter-mile or less for at least three hours. In many areas, Saturday’s storm
met those criteria. Rhode Island, all of which was under a blizzard warning,
banned all non-emergency road travel. Hardy New Englanders took the storm in
stride. Dave McGillivray, race director for the Boston Marathon, jokingly
invited the public to his suburban Boston home on Saturday for a free
snow-shoveling clinic. “I will provide the driveway and multiple walkways to
ensure your training is conducted in the most lifelike situation,” he said. Washington
and Baltimore got some snow but were largely spared. The worst of the
nor’easter was expected to blow by Sunday morning into Canada, where several
provinces were under warnings.
^ We are now starting to dig out.
^
https://www.newsnationnow.com/weather/100k-without-power-in-northeast-after-powerful-blizzard/
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