Storm threatens nasty Monday morning commute across
Northeast
A messy Monday morning
commute could be in the offing across the northeast corridor after a powerful
storm that crept across the country dropped snow, freezing rain and sleet on
the Mid-Atlantic region Sunday.
A winter weather
advisory was in effect for the Boston area beginning at 11 p.m. Sunday. WFXT
chief meteorologist Kevin Lemanowicz called for sleet and freezing rain to take
place between 6 a.m. and 9 a.m. Monday morning, with slippery travel likely
northwest of Interstate 95. Between 9 a.m. and noon, Lemanowicz called for ice
to remain on the roads in western Massachusetts, between the Merrimack and
Connecticut River valleys.
In New York, a winter
weather advisory was in effect for much of the tri-state area until 5 a.m.
Monday, with early snow, sleet, and freezing rain likely to change to rain by
the morning rush. Forecasters warned of icy roads making for treacherous travel
overnight.
Not much snow was
expected to fall along the Interstate 95 corridor, with most forecasters
predicting between a coating and an inch for New York and Boston. However,
between three and six inches was predicted for parts of the Northeast interior,
while other locations were expected to receive just rain.
The storm forced the
cancellation of thousands of flights across the U.S. and slowed traffic on
roads, leading to a number of accidents, including a fatal crash on the
Pennsylvania Turnpike near Morgantown that led to a series of fender-benders
involving 50 cars that stranded some motorists for up to seven hours. More than
two dozen vehicles were involved in another series of crashes on nearby
Interstate 78.
What was forecast in the
Philadelphia area to be a tame storm system with about an inch of snow
gradually changing over to rain mushroomed into a full-blown snowstorm that
snarled mid-afternoon traffic along Interstate 95 in Pennsylvania from the
Delaware to New Jersey state lines.
Paul Jones, 24, a youth
hockey coach from Warminster in the Philadelphia suburbs, was on his way to a
game in Lancaster when he got stuck -- along with his fiancee, another coach
and three players -- in a major backup on the turnpike.
The roadway was
"snow-covered, slick," Jones said in an interview from the car, where
he was a passenger and had been at a standstill for more than an hour.
"People are in and
out" of their vehicles, he said. "Kids are having a snowball fight on
the side of the road, making snow angels, people are walking their dogs."
The National Weather
Service said the low pressure system from North Carolina north to New England
was being fed by disturbances from the southwest and moist air off the Atlantic.
A foot of snow was
reported in Newark, Del. Philadelphia International Airport received 8.6 inches
Sunday, more than it had all of last year. Other areas received far less: a
little over an inch was reported in Pennsylvania's Lehigh Valley, which usually
is hit harder than downtown Philadelphia.
The snow fell so heavily
in Philadelphia on Sunday that yard markers at Lincoln Financial Field -- where
the Eagles beat the Detroit Lions -- were completely obscured. It was almost as
bad in Pittsburgh, where the snow intensified after the opening kickoff.
Philadelphia fan Dave
Hamilton, of Ivyland, layered up for the game, wearing an Eagles shirt topped
with an Eagles sweatshirt and Eagles winter coat.
"Twenty-seven years
I've been a season-ticket holder, I've never seen snow at the game like
this," he said. "It just kept coming down. But we are all having fun
out there."
The tracking website
Flightaware.com estimates more than 2,500 flights were cancelled nationwide as
of Sunday evening and more than 6,000 flights were delayed. That follows two
days of similarly difficult travel conditions.
Philadelphia
International Airport had a temporary ground stop Sunday afternoon with snow
totals around 4 to 6 inches. Spokeswoman Stacey Jackson said a number of passengers
were expected to remain in the airport overnight since area hotels had been
full for several days. She said staff would hand out pillows and blankets to
travelers to make them "feel at home even though they are not."
Air passengers in the
Washington-area experienced increasing delays as the season's first real
snowstorm set in. The Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority said many
flights had been delayed at Dulles International and Ronald Reagan Washington
National airports.
Virginia, parts of West
Virginia and the metropolitan Washington, D.C., area braced for blackouts under
steady freezing rain, wet snow and sleet. Parts of northwest and southwest
Virginia and southern West Virginia were getting snow, while sleet and freezing
rain prevailed west and north of Richmond.
In Maryland, a
chain-reaction accident on Interstate 81 in Washington County involving more
than 20 vehicles delayed snow removal efforts for hours. The highway was closed
for more than three hours after a tractor-trailer ran into the median to avoid
cars that had spun out. It was hit by another tractor-trailer that overturned
and spilled its load. Several other tractor-trailers ran off the road and
jackknifed as their drivers tried to avoid the crash.
North Texas started to
thaw out slightly Sunday after two days of a near standstill with icy roads and
low temperatures. About 400 departures from Dallas-Fort Worth International
Airport were canceled Sunday. It will likely be a couple of days before the ice
that's coated the region melts completely.
The snowstorm raised
fears about a potentially dangerous Monday morning commute, with snow-laden
cars and perilous, icy roads. New Jersey's new U.S. senator, Cory Booker,
tweeted a promise to a Mount Holly resident to help him shovel out his car if
he still needed the help in the morning.
But the heavy snow
wasn't limited to the East Coast. A snowstorm that hit along the Utah-Arizona
border left hundreds of travelers stranded on Interstate 15 overnight into Sunday.
The Arizona Highway Patrol said passengers in about 300 vehicles became
stranded after up to 10 inches of snow and slick road conditions prompted the
closure of part of the highway. There were no immediate reports of serious
injuries
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