CNN: Parts of Northeast measuring snow in feet
"Alec Berg" wrote in message
...
Please just post the link and not the entire article in the future.
Thanks in advance.
Are you the Alec Berg that works at the Taco Bell just up the street from my
office?
On Sun, 07 Dec 2003 10:38:14 GMT, "Bjorn Viaene"
wrote:
CNN) -- The season's first major snowstorm walloped the Northeast on
Saturday, closing Boston's Logan International Airport and dumping at
least
23 inches in parts of New York.
The storm was heading northeast, and was expected to be centered
northeast
of Cape Cod, Massachusetts, by Sunday morning, according to the National
Weather Service.
The storm hit much of New England late Saturday with heavy snow, coastal
winds and blizzard conditions. It was expected to move northward Monday
into
Nova Scotia and Newfoundland, said Bob Oravec, a meteorologist with the
Weather Service in Camp Springs, Maryland.
"Anytime you get a storm that produces 1 or 2 feet, it's definitely a big
event," he said. "Being the first of the year is always problematic --
getting people used to winter again."
"The effects of the storm will be fairly long-lasting across much of New
England," Oravec said.
Eight traffic deaths have been blamed on the storm, The Associated Press
reported. One death was reported in Pennsylvania, one in Connecticut, and
two each in New Jersey, Vermont and Virginia.
The weather service posted blizzard warnings through Sunday morning for
Long
Island, northeastern New Jersey, Connecticut, and sections of eastern New
York including Long Island. A warning was posted for northeastern Maine
until Sunday evening.
Logan airport shut down Saturday evening with no prediction on when it
might
reopen, said Barbara Platt, a spokeswoman for the Massachusetts Port
Authority, which manages the airport.
Platt said the airport had closed several times Saturday for plowing. By
10
p.m., the airport had reported 11 inches of snow.
She couldn't say how many flights were affected, but an airport spokesman
said earlier that 176 inbound flights and 149 outbound flights were
canceled, and more were expected.
At LaGuardia Airport in New York City, most flights were canceled. Those
that were not were landing and taking off with 30-minute delays, the Port
Authority of New York and New Jersey reported.
At Newark Liberty International Airport, 200 flights were canceled, and
delays of 30 minutes to three hours were the norm. At John F. Kennedy
International Airport, numerous cancellations were reported.
Baltimore-Washington International Airport closed for a half-hour in the
afternoon.
Impacts from the flight cancellations were felt in areas unaffected by
the
storm. Delays of up to several hours were reported at Hartsfield-Jackson
International Airport in Atlanta, Georgia.
Riverdale in Bronx County, New York, reported 23 inches as of 8 p.m. EST.
Also in New York, Suffolk County posted up to 18 inches; and Central
Park,
13 inches, meteorologist Wes Junker said.
Essex County, Massachusetts, had up to 12 inches.
Boston Mayor Tom Menino declared a snow emergency for his city at 2 p.m.
A spokesman for the Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency said he was
expecting 2-4 inches of snow per hour, with whiteout conditions, lasting
into Sunday.
One-two punch
The snowfall has come as a one-two punch -- with the initial blow
Thursday
over parts of New York and Pennsylvania, followed by a lull Friday, and
then
a second wind Friday night into Saturday, Oravec said.
Although nearly all of New York's city streets had been salted and more
than
1,300 plows were at work, Mayor Michael Bloomberg pleaded with New
Yorkers
to use buses and subways. "Leave your car home," he said.
Being the first of the year is always problematic -- getting people used
to
winter again.
-- Bob Oravec, meteorologist with the National Weather Service
Still, he noted, "The city is open. Broadway is open. The movie theaters
are
open. The restaurants are open. The parks are open." Bloomberg predicted
the
city would be back to normal by Monday.
New Jersey Gov. James McGreevey told CNN, "We're getting hammered."
Forty accidents had occurred along the New Jersey Turnpike, where the
speed
limit was lowered to 35 mph.
Two people died when an SUV swerved into a tractor trailer, he said.
Still, McGreevey added: "We haven't declared a state of emergency. All
roads
are open ... Right now, we think it is manageable. We want to get through
this. My daughter's second birthday is tomorrow, and Elmo better show
up."
CNN correspondent Adaora Udoji and producers Ronnie Berke in Boston and
Phil
Hirschkorn in New York contributed to this report.
Berg is back.
"I doubt it." - Dean
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