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  • Recommended: Chaos and courage as tornado wrecks elementary schools
  • Recommended: More storms on the way, tornadoes possible across swath of US
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NBC News reporters bring you compelling stories from across the nation. For more US news, follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

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  • 20
    Mar
    2013
    11:07am, EDT

    Has spring really sprung? Snow, chilly temps make it hard to believe

    Temperatures are much lower than normal for this time of year, and yet another winter weather system is in store for the weekend. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    By Elizabeth Chuck, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The first day of spring didn't feel very spring-like for many Americans.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    With snow totals topping 16 inches in parts of New England and temperatures only forecast to reach the teens in parts of the Midwest, Wednesday was decidedly wintry, regardless of the date of the calendar.

    Snow and sleet slammed the Northeast, with lingering snowfall on Wednesday leaving 7 inches in winter-weary Boston, according to weather.com. Parts of New Hampshire saw 16 inches; Maine got a foot.

    Nina Walker, who lives in the Boston suburb of Woburn, told The Associated Press she shoveled about 8 inches of snow off her driveway on Tuesday. Having lived in New England her whole life, she said late-season snowstorms were fine -- but only until March 31.

    "Once I hear the word 'April,' I am really offended when I hear the word 'snow,'" she said. "So this is OK today, but a couple of weeks from now, it had better not happen."

    Read more from weather.com 

     Temperatures battled to get out of the single-digits in Minnesota, reported KARE11.com, an NBC affiliate in Minneapolis-St. Paul. It was the coldest start to spring for Minneapolis in 48 years, the station said.

     In Michigan, 15 inches of snow were reported, which included both lake-effect snow and snow from the same system that had made its way to the Northeast, weather.com said.

     One to six inches more were possible in Michigan and Wisconsin -- which got 11 inches in the north-central part of the state -- and one to three inches were forecast for northern Indiana and northeast Ohio, which were already pummeled by freezing rain and ice this week.

    Winslow Townson / AP

    A pedestrian walks through the campus of Phillips Academy during a winter storm in Andover, Mass., on Tuesday, March 19. Winter went out with a blast in the Northeast on Tuesday, snow and sleet closing schools in some areas and making roads an icy, slippery mess a day before spring starts.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.


     

    19 comments

    "Once I hear the word 'April,' I am really offended when I hear the word 'snow,'" she said. "So this is OK today, but a couple of weeks from now, it had better not happen." Ya here that mother nature? ...Its an "or else" situation..best heed Nina's warning.....or shes going to.......???

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, snow, new-england, midwest, spring, northeast
  • Updated
    18
    Mar
    2013
    8:54am, EDT

    Late-season winter storm threatens huge swath of US

    View more videos at: http://nbcchicago.com.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    March may go out like a lamb, but it promises to be a lion for the next few days for a huge strip of the country.

    A late-season winter storm is predicted to bring snow, ice and even blizzard conditions from the Northern Plains to the New England coast and as far south as the nation's capital.

    Wednesday is the first day of spring, but try telling that to people in the affected areas. 

    The National Weather Service issued blizzard warnings for large parts of the Dakotas and Minnesota as winds gusted at 50 mph and snow started piling up late Sunday and early Monday.

    Traffic could be snarled in urban centers, especially the Twin Cities, and things might not be much better in Chicago, where just a bit of snow is forecast but freezing rain threatens to bedevil Monday morning commuters.

    The wintry mess will spread across the northern Great Lakes region and into the Northeast later Monday and into Tuesday, according to Weather.com.

    Full coverage from Weather.com

    Most of Wisconsin is under a winter weather advisory, while lake-effect snows are expected in western Michigan. Across the southern Great Lakes, including Cleveland and much of northern Ohio, as well as parts of western Pennsylvania, snow is expected to be followed by freezing rain throughout much of Monday, potentially causing traffic tie-ups throughout the region, according to NBCChicago.com said.

    More news from NBCChicago.com

    Much of the same is possible as far south as Washington, D.C. Its far western, northern and southern suburbs in Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia were under winter storm warnings and advisories through Monday evening.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Much of the heavily populated Northeast Corridor looks to escape the worst of the snow, but freezing rain and some snow could complicate travel in New York, NBCNewYork.com warned.

    More news from NBCNewYork.com

    Boston lies just to the east of the weather service winter storm warning area, but much of New England doesn't look likely to be spared the storm.

    Most of northern New England was under winter storm warning into Tuesday -- and through Wednesday for much of Maine -- with forecasters predicting up to 14 inches of snow and winds gusting at 25 to 30 mph from Western New York to the Maine coast.

    This story was originally published on Mon Mar 18, 2013 5:32 AM EDT

    197 comments

    Damn that Al Gore! If he never invented this internet or he never invented global warming aka climate change, these freaky storms would never be happening (...he says with a large touch of sarcasm).

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    Explore related topics: weather, chicago, winter-storm, snow, great-lakes, midwest, northeast, featured, dakotas, updated, nbcnewyork, nbcchicago
  • Updated
    27
    Feb
    2013
    12:48pm, EST

    Winter storm drops snow from Missouri to Maine

    Sydney Brink / Sedalia Democrat via AP

    Tedd Hendrix, of Sedalia, Mo., frees a line of cable from downed branches Tuesday as he works to tie the line off so that it is elevated and out of the road. A snow storm, the second in less than a week, dumped about a foot of snow in Sedalia, knocking out power around the town and collapsing the roofs of several buildings.

    By John Newland and Matthew DeLuca, NBC News

    A winter storm coated a swath of the country from Missouri to Maine with snow Wednesday, and forecasters warned of difficult travel.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    About 100 flights into and out of Chicago’s O’Hare airport were canceled by midday, according to FlightAware.com, on top of more than 500 the day before.

    Chicago had almost 5 inches of snow Tuesday, bringing its total for February to 14.9 inches and ranking it among the 20 snowiest months on record, according to NBCChicago.com.

    As the storm moves east, it is expected to dump 6 to 10 inches of snow Wednesday and Thursday from the Allegheny Mountains of western Pennsylvania through the Adirondacks of upstate New York and into interior New England.

    Full coverage from Weather.com

    It is the same storm system that blasted the Rockies and the Great Plains earlier this week, packing hurricane-force wind gusts and shutting down travel in Kansas, Oklahoma and the Texas Panhandle.

    “It has a couple of jabs yet, especially for New England,” said Weather Channel meteorologist Tom Niziol.

    In the Midwest, the National Weather Service issued winter storm warnings for Wednesday — some stretching into Thursday — for parts of Iowa, Missouri, Wisconsin and Michigan. Heavily populated areas, including Milwaukee, suburban Chicago, northern suburbs of Detroit and Des Moines, Iowa, were also under warnings.

    In the Northeast, the storm was expected to bring snow and ice to New York, Vermont, New Hampshire and parts of Maine through Thursday afternoon.

    New York and other major cities such as Boston were forecast to mostly escape the heavy weather. But commuters in New York slogged through heavy wind and rain to get to work Wednesday. Upstate New York and northern parts of New England were expected to see further snow through Wednesday into the evening.

    “It’s going to linger for a long time over portions of the Northeast,” meteorologist Brian Korty told Reuters.

    The storm's biggest impact has been in Texas, Kansas and Oklahoma, though. In Texas, winds gusted to 84 mph near El Paso, according to Weather.com, which reported 7-foot snow drifts in Silverton, south of Amarillo.

    The 19 inches of snow in Amarillo on Monday set a 120-year record, meteorologist Krissy Scotten told NBC Dallas-Fort Worth. The city in the Texas Panhandle usually sees an average of just under 18 inches for the entire winter, Scotten said.

    To the east, parts of Missouri got more than a foot of snow, and Kansas City had 8 inches with more falling Wednesday morning.

    Related:

    Deadly storm dumps snow in North, heavy rain in South
    Two dead as wind-whipped storm pounds Great Plains

     

     

     

    This story was originally published on Wed Feb 27, 2013 5:01 AM EST

    146 comments

    Now, if this were happening in July...it would be news. Winter weather in February!!! Oh my Gawd!!

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    Explore related topics: weather, winter-storm, snow, midwest, northeast, updated
  • 24
    Feb
    2013
    6:50am, EST

    'Happens every time': New England storm could pack less punch than feared

    The Weather Channel's Kim Cunningham has the latest on a storm that's headed to New England and a second storm that's coming out of the Rockies.

    By Svea Herbst-Bayliss and Ross Kerber, Reuters

    BOSTON - A weather system threatening New England with a third straight weekend of winter storms appeared to be weakening on Saturday night, promising less snowfall than expected. 

    Another storm was rolling out of the Rocky Mountains in the Western United States and could create blizzard conditions in Colorado over the weekend, according to a National Weather Service advisory. 

    Forecasters were also predicting blizzard conditions from Oklahoma through Missouri early next week when another snowstorm hits an area of the Northern United States from the Plains to the Great Lakes. 

    But by Saturday evening, the East Coast storm was moving more east and offshore than anticipated - potentially leaving areas like Boston with much less snowfall than originally expected, said Eleanor Vallier-Talbot of the National Weather Service in Taunton, Massachusetts. 

    "The further south you go, the less snow. Boston proper might not even see an inch of snow," she said. "The forecast models have been slowly but surely backing off this thing." 

    Related: Snow, freezing rain to lash New England through Sunday

    Much of the Midwest is already blanketed with snow, with more than a foot reported in Kansas on Thursday, forcing airports to cancel hundreds of flights and leaving motorists stranded on highways. 

    On Colorado's high plains, up to a foot of snow was possible overnight and throughout Sunday, with winds gusting up to 45 miles an hour, said Frank Cooper, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Boulder. 

    A spokeswoman for the Denver International Airport said passengers could expect delays on Sunday as crews de-iced aircraft and cleared runways, and a Southwest Airlines spokeswoman, Olga Romero, said 46 flights in and out of Denver had been canceled until 11 a.m. on Sunday. 

    States of emergency 
    The New England coast - from northern Connecticut to southern Maine - was expecting an extended mix of snow and rain, according to a National Weather Service advisory. Residents were taking it in stride. 

    "Look, it's winter, it's New England, it snows. Happens every time!" said Steve Scardino, a software sales executive and lifelong New Englander from Hopkinton, Massachusetts. 

    Farther north, near Portland, Maine, the heaviest snow was not expected until Sunday, with accumulations up to 8 inches farther inland. 

    The weather service said the storm may bring sleet and freezing rain to the Appalachians and mid-Atlantic states as well, with thunderstorms expected in the Southeast. It likely will dump rain from New York City to Philadelphia, it said. The storm barreled eastward after pummeling the Midwest during the week. In Kansas City, Missouri, Mayor Sly James said about 60 buses were stuck on snowbound streets on Friday, and even tow trucks were immobilized. 

    After a storm last week dumped some 14 inches of snow on Wichita, Kansas, and 11 inches on Kansas City, residents from Texas to Nebraska were bracing for another one early next week, according to AccuWeather.com. 

    Forecasters predicted heavy snow developing on Sunday night and increasing to a rate of 2 inches an hour from northern Oklahoma through central Kansas. 

    Missouri Governor Jay Nixon and Kansas Governor Sam Brownback declared states of emergency because of possible power outages and generally hazardous travel. 

    Drought-stricken farmers in the Great Plains, one of the world's largest wheat-growing areas, welcomed the moisture, although experts said even more rain or snow would be needed to ensure healthy crops. 

    Related:

    Storm expected to give New England third straight weekend of snow

    Storms to dump snow on New England, heavy rain on Southeast, forecasters warn

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    44 comments

    Maybe that will teach you idiots in the media to stop over hyping normal winter weather.

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    Explore related topics: weather, storm, northeast, featured
  • 18
    Feb
    2013
    7:40am, EST

    26 injured as snow sparks crashes on I-95 in Connecticut

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Another round of howling winds and blowing snow punished parts of New England, with at least 26 people hurt in collisions that forced the closure of busy Interstate 95 on Sunday.

    More than a dozen collisions damaged 30 cars along a two-exit stretch of I-95 near West Haven, Conn., NBCConnecticut.com reported. Police closed both sides of the East Coast's primary north-south route for two hours.

    As the storm system pushed north, it left a stretch along the northern border from upstate New York to the east coast of Maine bracing for bitterly cold wind chills and more snow, according to the National Weather Service. Eastern Maine faced a blizzard warning until 4 p.m. ET Monday.

    Winds were predicted to gust up to 50 mph, causing wind chills approaching 30 degrees below zero. Blowing snow was likely to create white-out conditions and produce drifts up to several feet high, the weather service said. 

    More from NBCConnecticut.com

    The second blizzard in as many weeks is hitting the Northeast. NBC's Lester Holt reports.

    In addition to Maine, parts of New York, Vermont and New Hampshire were under similar advisories, with wind chills of nearly 30 below possible in higher elevations.

    Weather.com predicted that the wind would be a much bigger problem than snow, with only an additional inch or two expected. Such snows are "not particularly heavy by New England standards," weather.com said, but poor visibility and bitterly cold air presented real dangers.

    More from Weather.com

    No widespread flight cancellations were reported by 6 a.m. ET Monday, according to FlightAware.com. However, the weather system on Sunday contributed to more than 200 U.S. and Canadian flight cancellations. Particularly hard hit was Charlotte-Douglas International Airport in North Carolina, where 84 flights were canceled. The storm dropped flurries as far south as Charleston, N.C.

    Elsewhere, the Northern Plains was experiencing the nation's harshest winter weather.

    The weather service issued blizzard warnings for parts of North Dakota and Minnesota, with wind gusts up to 45 mph and snowfall of up to 10 inches expected through Monday evening. The nearly 3 million inhabitants of Minneapolis-St. Paul were forecast to just miss the worst of the weather. 

    Related:

    High winds, snow hit New England

    Clobbered Northeast begins to dig out

     


    141 comments

    We must ban snow, especially snow on interstate highways. It causes too many injuries....

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  • 13
    Feb
    2013
    10:48am, EST

    For blizzard-weary Northeast, here comes more snow

    Winslow Townson / AP

    People dig out their cars in Boston, on Sunday, Feb. 10. A howling storm across the Northeast left the New York-to-Boston corridor shrouded in 1 to 3 feet of snow Saturday, stranding motorists on highways overnight and piling up drifts so high that some homeowners couldn't get their doors open.

    By Erin McClam, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The snow-weary Northeast is about to get hit again. And again.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Forecasters say parts of New England — still digging out from an epic snowstorm last weekend — should get several inches of snow Wednesday night, according to weather.com. New York and Philadelphia could see 1 to 3 inches.

    Temperatures are not expected to be low enough to cause significant travel problems, said Tom Moore, a meteorologist for The Weather Channel.

    More coverage from weather.com

    Then, this weekend, a second round: A weather system should deliver light snow to the Great Lakes, Ohio Valley and Appalachians on Friday, then dust northern New England on Saturday.

    Earlier forecast models suggested that the weekend storm could sock the Northeast with high wind and heavy snow, but those models now think a low-pressure system will stay far enough offshore to keep that from happening.

    The blizzard last weekend left at least 12 people dead, buried cars along highways, mangled travel across the country and dumped more than 3 feet of snow in some places.

    It’s still causing problems: Just Wednesday morning, snow mounds and icy roads slowed firefighters’ response to a house fire in Hampton, Conn., fire officials told NBCConnecticut.com.

    The family in the 3,000-square-foot home made it out safely, but it took firefighters six hours to put down the blaze. And a firefighter slipped on ice and broke his ankle.

    EARLIER: Northeast stirs back to life after weekend blizzard

    121 comments

    Gee SallyAnn, bitter much? When I lived in the UP of Michigan, it snowed continually. Houghton/Hancock got snow every single day for months. So, it was news when it stopped for a day! It is not news when areas of the country that routinely get a ton of snow, get snow.

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  • 12
    Feb
    2013
    7:57am, EST

    Northeast could be in for more snow

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    A couple walks through Prospect Park in New York on Monday as the Northeast began returning to work after being hit by a massive winter storm. Another severe storm could be on the way this weekend, but forecasts are mixed.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Even as it recovers from a punishing snowstorm that buried much of New York and New England, the Northeast could be in for more snow, according to meteorologists.

    A system forecast to bring snow, heavy in places, to parts of the Southern Plains and Mid-Atlantic may veer northeastward Wednesday and give a fresh dusting to already-covered states. And yet another winter storm is possible for the coming weekend, though there is less confidence that it will, said Weather Channel meteorologist Tom Moore.

    More from The Weather Channel

    As of Tuesday morning, the storm had an area from the Texas Panhandle to central Oklahoma in its sights.

    Slideshow: Northeast storm

    Craig Ruttle / AP

    A dangerous winter storm churned Friday into the Northeast as forecasters warned of a whiteout.

    Launch slideshow

    A winter storm warning issued by the National Weather Service cautioned that 6 to 9 inches of snowfall was likely in central and eastern parts of the Texas Panhandle and parts of Oklahoma, with travel becoming hazardous. That warning was scheduled to remain in effect until 9 p.m. ET Tuesday.

    Forecasters say the storm will move through the Appalachians and the Mid-Atlantic on Wednesday, then turn slightly toward the Northeast, generally leaving behind only a couple of inches of snow.

    But that’s not the storm the Northeast needs to worry about. The potential problem comes with a low-pressure system that could lash the Northeast with heavy snow and high winds this weekend, Moore said.

    But there’s good news: The latest computer models are in disagreement over the likelihood of that happening. One model shows the low pressure staying offshore and having no ill effects on the Northeast. The other shows wretched weather for an area already suffering.

    “It is still too early to choose one solution over the other,” Moore said.

    Related:

    • Long Island residents beg for snow plows
    • Northeast returning to normal after storm

    30 comments

    The Northeast is a very large place. Is there a chance of snow in Ohio? Pennsylvania? New York City? Upstate New York? Massachusetts? Maine? New Hampshire? Vermont? Without that information, this story says nothing.

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    Explore related topics: weather, snow, southern-plains, northeast, storm-system
  • 9
    Feb
    2013
    6:25am, EST

    Clobbered by record-setting blizzard, Northeast begins to dig out

    NBC's Ron Mott reports that cleanup is slowly underway from the Blizzard of 2013 is underway in the Northeast.

    By Erin McClam, Staff Writer, NBC News

     Updated at 4:30 p.m. ET: A gusting winter storm buried parts of the Northeast under 3 feet of snow and left millions of people with little to do Sunday but wait — for lights to come on, flights to resume and packed-in cars to be freed.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Transportation systems slowly flickered back. New York airports reopened on limited schedules, and around 11 p.m. Saturday night Boston’s Logan International Airport welcomed in its first flight since the storm hit. All major airports are operational again, but many in the affected area are still experiencing delays and cancellations.

    Still, for the most part, the country’s most populous region came to a standstill for a day. Elected officials pleaded with people to stay inside, even after the snow stopped, to let emergency crews and snowplows do their work.

    Full coverage from The Weather Channel

    “This is going to go on for a number of days,” Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy said. “This will not all be done today.”


    Gov. Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island warned that while it was no longer snowing, the danger hadn't ended.

    "People need to take this storm seriously, even after it's over. If you have any kind of heart condition, be careful with the shoveling," The Associated Press quoted him as saying.

    The storm was blamed for at least 10 deaths, including a child poisoned by carbon monoxide and an 81-year-old Connecticut woman who was clearing snow with a blower who was struck and killed by a hit-and-run driver.

    At 4:00 p.m. ET Sunday, 290,726 homes and businesses were without power in New York, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut, down from a total of about 650,000. Some schools in the region said that they would be closed on Monday, according to the AP.

    NBC's Ron Allen joins Lester Holt with the latest from Connecticut, a state that had some of the highest snow totals.

    And along the coast, including among people battered by Superstorm Sandy less than four months ago, flooding was a concern. The snowstorm announced itself with hurricane-force winds and churned up offshore waters.

    When the snow finally stopped Saturday afternoon, cities and towns reported eye-popping snow totals — 40 inches in Hampden, Conn., 38 inches in Milford, Conn., and 34 inches in New Haven. Portland, Maine, got almost 32 inches, breaking its record.

    Boston reported a hair under 25 inches, placing the storm in that city’s five-worst on record. Concord, N.H., reported 2 feet. Central Park in New York — by afternoon a sledder’s paradise — reported 11.4 inches.

    The National Weather Service recorded peak wind gusts of 83 mph in Cuttyhunk, Mass., the strength of a Category 1 hurricane. There were gusts of 72 mph in Westport, Conn., and 76 mph in East Boston.

    On the Long Island Expressway, which looked more like a moonscape than a busy thoroughfare, 60 to 100 cars were stuck in the snow, and police officers worked through the night to free people from cars and get them to safety.

    Richard Ebbrecht, a chiropractor, told the AP that he left his office in Brooklyn at 3 p.m. Friday and got stuck six or seven times on the expressway and other roads.

     “We were all helping each other, shoveling, pushing,” he said.

    He gave up and settled in for the night just two miles from home. At 8 a.m., he walked the rest of the way.

     “I could run my car and keep the heat on and listen to the radio a little bit,” he told the AP. “It was very icy under my car. That’s why my car is still there.”

    Among the 10 deaths blamed on the storm was an 11-year-old boy in Boston who was overcome by carbon monoxide while keeping warm in the car.

    NBC's Ron Mott joins Lester Holt with an updates on the blizzard's aftermath in Rhode Island.

    The boy had been helping his father shovel out the car and got cold. The father started the engine, and the boy got inside, a Boston fire spokesman told the AP. But the car’s exhaust pipe was covered by a snowbank.

    In a separate incident, also in Boston, a 20-year-old man was found dead in his car. He was also overcome by carbon monoxide fumes.

    In Auburn, N.H., a man was killed after losing control of his car and hitting a tree. He was found dead in his car by local authorities.

    In Prospect, Conn., an 81-year-old woman was using a snowblower when a driver struck and killed her and fled the scene, Malloy said. In Danbury, a man slipped on a porch and was found dead Saturday morning, the mayor told NBC Connecticut.

    A 53-year-old man in Bridgeport, Conn., was found dead under snow at his house, possibly from hypothermia or a cardiac arrest, authorities said. A 55-year-old New Milford man died after he suffered a heart attack while plowing. A Shelton man, 49, died while digging out his truck. 

    A man in Livingston County, N.Y., was plowing his driveway with a tractor Friday night when the tractor went off the edge of the road and fell on top of him.

    And in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., an 18-year-old woman lost control of her car in the snow and struck Muril M. Hancock, 74, who was walking near the shoulder, police said Friday. Hancock died at the hospital.

    On the Long Island Expressway, dozens of cars were stuck in the snow, and police officers worked through the night to free people from cars and get them to safety. NBC's Anne Thompson reports.

    In New York, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Saturday morning that 2,200 pieces of equipment were on the streets, salting and plowing. He said that all the primary streets in the city had been plowed.

     “I think it’s fair to say that we were very lucky,” he said. “Looks like we dodged a bullet.”

    He said the city had offered help to other places hit harder by the storm.

    In Massachusetts, Gov. Deval Patrick had ordered all cars off the roads but announced Saturday afternoon that he was lifting the ban for Interstate 91 and the slice of the state to the west.

    Connecticut had a similar ban in place, but Malloy could not say when it might be lifted. He said Saturday afternoon that he expected it to remain in place at least for the rest of the day.

    Transportation systems slowly flickered back to life Saturday, but for the most part, the country's most populous region came to a standstill for a day. NBC's Rehema Ellis reports.

    The winter storm was fueled by two weather systems — a so-called clipper pattern that swept across the Midwest and a band of rain that churned up from the South. They clashed explosively over the Northeast on Friday.

    The storm arrived in earnest Friday night. The governors of New York, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island all declared states of emergency.

    More than 800 National Guard soldiers and airmen were activated in Connecticut, Massachusetts and New York to provide roadway support, emergency transportation and back-up for first responders, the Department of Defense said.

    Related:

    'Absolutely beautiful' scene in Conn. town hit by most snow

    Sandy survivors: It's like a repeat 'nightmare'  

    The Weather Channel live blog

    State-by-state impact of the storm

    Current conditions

    773 comments

    I find it interesting that most of these people are so concerned with their own well being. However, we in the South, deal with these tribulations all the time. Suddenly, they get hit with a storm, then a snowstorm, and they think they're so in trouble! Really? Poeple, buck up! Deal with it! That's  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: hurricane, weather, new-york, storm, snow, boston, winds, northeast, featured
  • 8
    Feb
    2013
    7:32am, EST

    Mammoth snowstorm knocks out power to more than half a million customers

    By Erin McClam and Kari Huus, NBC News

    Updated at 4:20 a.m. ET: A powerful winter storm pounded the Northeast Saturday, with gusting winds and heavy snow causing power failures for hundreds of thousands of people, dozens of accidents and fuel shortages at gas stations. 

    At least one death was confirmed, a snow-related car accident in Poughkeepsie, N.Y.

    By 4:20 a.m. ET Saturday, 26 inches of snow had fallen at Hamden, Conn., with 22.4 inches at Upton, N.Y., and 15.3 in Portland, Maine, weather.com reported. New York City's Central park had 6.3 inches.

    Blizzard warnings were issued for the New York City metro area, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, coastal New Hampshire and coastal Maine, weather.com added.

    Forecasters said they expected Massachusetts to get the most snowfall, with an accumulation of up to 3 feet in some spots. The worst snowfall on record in Boston was a 27.5-inch blast a decade ago.

    Coastal residents were warned that the winds could top 70 mph. Those living on north- and east-facing shorelines from Boston south to Cape Cod Bay were told to prepare for tides 2 to 4 feet above normal.

    "Coastal flooding is expected on the Maine, New Hampshire and Massachusetts coastlines," the National Weather Service said.

    "I'm really nervous," Kathy Niznansky, a 65-year-old teacher in coastal Fairfield, Conn. told The Associated Press. Niznansky is still recovering from flooding from Superstorm Sandy which arrived on her birthday and knocked her out of her house near the beach for two months. "Now I'm really worried about this tide tonight. I just don't want any more flooding."

    In Massachusetts, gusts over 50 mph were reported in Boston and over 60 mph on Nantucket Island. Winds up to 75 mph were possible in Provincetown, forecasters said.

    Police said hundreds of cars were stuck on the Long Island Expressway, NBC weatherman Al Roker said in a message on Twitter.

    The winter storm gathered strength as two weather systems — a so-called clipper pattern sweeping across the Midwest and a band of rain from the South — converged over the Northeast early Friday.

    By late Friday, the storm had arrived in earnest and was expected to pummel New England through Saturday and last as long as Sunday farther north.

    Governors of New York, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island declared states of emergency. 

    More than 800 National Guard soldiers and airmen were activated in Connecticut, Massachusetts and New York to provide roadway support, emergency transportation and back-up for first responders, the Department of Defense said Friday evening, while governors in the region warned people to get home and be prepared for power outages.

    Airlines canceled more than 3,000 flights on Friday, Boston closed its subway, Amtrak suspended some service, and cities across the Northeast prepared to deploy an armada of snowplows and salt-spreading trucks.

    More than half a million people were without power, including a whopping 389,000 customers in Massachusetts, 177,000 in Rhode Island and 35,000 in Connecticut, and more power failures were expected overnight. 

    For people in the blizzard’s path, forecasters and authorities had a clear message: Stay home.

    Driving bans
    Governors in Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts announced restrictions on driving.

    In the most sweeping ban, Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick ordered all non-essential vehicles off the roads by 4 p.m. and said people should brace to be snowed in for two days. He said the storm was "profoundly different" from others the state has endured in recent years.

    Gov. Dannel Malloy of Connecticut banned car traffic on limited-access highways starting at 4 p.m. State police reported nearly 100 minor accidents across the state by Friday afternoon.

    "If you don't currently have a reason to be on the road, if you're not an emergency personnel that's required to report to work somewhere, stay home," Malloy said at a state armory news conference. "This is it. Things are starting to accumulate."

    In the Poughkeepsie, N.Y. crash, a car driven by an 18-year-old female went out of control in the snow and struck Muril M. Hancock, 74, who was walking near the shoulder, police said. Hancock died from his injuries at the hospital.

    The eastern part of Connecticut was experiencing white-out conditions late into the evening, the state's emergency operations center reported, and even snowplows were immobilized because of the weather.

    Several motorists were reported stranded on snowed-in highways and interstates, but no injuries had been reported. Still, emergency crews were unable to respond due to the severe conditions.

    A 19-car pileup on Interstate 295 in Falmouth, Maine, was blamed on the storm. Police said there were minor injuries.

    Elsewhere, Rhode Island police asked people for loaner snowmobiles, and out-of-state utility crews headed for Connecticut to help.

    Full coverage from The Weather Channel
    Watch live video of the Northeast blizzard
     
    Sandy survivors: It's like a repeat 'nightmare'  

    Airline cancellations piled up all morning. Almost 3,000 flights were scrapped for Friday and more than 1,000 more for Saturday, according to FlightAware.com.

    At the major airports in New York and New England, most major airlines said they would shut down completely Friday afternoon.

    Schools were closed in Boston and for most of New England on Friday. Patrick ordered non-essential state workers to stay home Friday and encouraged private employers to do the same.

    In New York, the transit agency added more than 20 afternoon trains on its Metro-North commuter line from Grand Central Terminal to get people out of the city before the worst hit.

    The Metro-North suspended service Friday night due to the storm. The Long Island Rail Road shut down service east of Speonk about 9 p.m.

    Mayor Michael Bloomberg warned people to stay in and to use public transportation if they had to go out, although even that carried the possibility of disruptions. The city had 250,000 tons of salt at the ready for the roads.

    He encouraged New Yorkers to stay in and cook a meal or read a good book.

    "This is a very serious storm, and we should treat it that way," said Tom Prendergast, president of the agency that runs New York subways and buses.

    The weather service warned that the combination of heavy snow and high winds would limit visibility and cause whiteout conditions at times.

    "Those venturing outdoors may become lost or disoriented," the weather service said in an advisory issued for the Boston area.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Related:

    The Weather Channel live stream

    The Weather Channel live blog

    State-by-state impact of the storm

    Current conditions

    Show us your storm photos by adding #NBCNewsPics to your tweet or Instagram post, or upload your pictures directly by clicking the box below.

    1049 comments

    To my mom&dad, and all my relatives and friends in the USA, my prayers are for all of u ,stay in doors plz love u all

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    Explore related topics: weather, new-york, boston, new-england, northeast, featured, blizzard
  • 6
    Feb
    2013
    6:01am, EST

    Snowstorm alert: Northeast braces for possible winter 'blockbuster'

    By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

    Published at 6:05 a.m. ET: A winter storm heading for the Northeast could bring major snowfall to upstate New York and New England on Friday and into the weekend – but forecasts are divided on its potential impact.

    A clipper from the north is expected to combine with a rainy storm moving through the South to create a snowstorm for many parts of the region late Friday and Saturday, according to Weather Channel meteorologist Kevin Roth.

    However, there is still some uncertainty on exactly where and when the two systems combine, he said.

    For cities such as Boston, the changing forecast could mean the difference between an icy nuisance and a major winter storm that would dump up to 2 feet of snow, bringing widespread disruption.

    “The European model, which is the generally the best model we have, has continued to insist there is going to be this really big storm but the other models are not bullish on it at all,” the Weather Channel’s Carl Parker said. “The difference is -- will it be a blockbuster for places like Boston?” 

    The last time Boston had one foot of snow was in January 2011.

    Most of the I-95 corridor is already set for heavy rain on Friday.

    Slideshow: Winter's frozen splendor

    /

    Ice and snow changes our environment, as winter engulfs our world.

    Launch slideshow

    Under the European model, the whole region would see significant snow but up to 2 feet would be dumped on Massachusetts – including Boston – and southern Maine overnight Friday.

    That level of snow is “potentially life-threatening,” the Weather Channel’s Chris Warren warned.

    However, other U.S. models show the two systems combining further to the east, meaning there would still be heavy snow in northern New England but cities such as Boston could receive as little as 2 inches.

    Related:

    Full coverage from weather.com

     

     

     

    251 comments

    GM Creek Dog - seems our US weather forecasters are like Carnac the Magnificent (Old Johnny Carson Character!) Cookies are good, especially fresh baked! Northeast prepares for Possible Blockbuster Storm?

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    Explore related topics: weather, new-york, winter, storm, snow, boston, weather-channel, us-news, northeast, featured
  • 28
    Jan
    2013
    2:20pm, EST

    Light snow, ice slides into Northeast, storm threatens Plains

    As cool air moves in from Canada, the unusually high temperatures in the South will plummet, which could result in severe weather systems. The Weather Channel's Chris Warren reports.

    By Andrew Mach, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A winter storm that socked the Midwest last week moved across the Northeast on Monday, bringing light snow, ice and rain to the region, forecasters said. 


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The wintry mix hit from eastern Pennsylvania through southern New England, The Weather Channel reported. Major accumulations of snow were not anticipated.


    Snowfall of up to 3 inches is possible from central and northern New York through central and northern New England.

    The weather will change to sleet and freezing rain in southern New York, northeastern Pennsylvania and northern New Jersey, and roads could be slick.

    Morning sleet and freezing rain forecast to become afternoon rain in western Virginia, central and southeastern Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey, Maryland and Delaware.

    Stan Honda / AFP - Getty Images

    Snow falls lightly in Manhattan, N.Y., on Monday, January 28, 2013. Temperatures near freezing are making it tricky for commuters and pedestrians.

    The mixture of freezing rain and sleet in the Northeast follows a weekend of disruption in the Midwest, with many flights in and out of Chicago, Minneapolis and St. Louis being grounded by icy runways on Sunday, according to Reuters.

    Hundreds of churches across Iowa cancelled Sunday services as sidewalks were turned to sheets of ice by the storm that covered the region, Reuters said.

    Meanwhile, a storm bringing rain to the southwest Monday was expected to move into the southern Plains and southern half of the Mississippi Valley on Tuesday.

    Damaging wind gusts, hail and tornadoes are possible from eastern Oklahoma and northeast Texas to central and southern Illinois, western Kentucky, western Tennessee, northwest Mississippi and northern Louisiana Tuesday.

    In the northern Plains, as many as 4 to 6 inches of precipitation was expected from eastern North Dakota to northern Minnesota Monday afternoon through Tuesday.

    Elsewhere, heavy mountain snows and strong winds were forecast in mountain areas across the West that will result in significant drifting snow, which has prompted an avalanche watch for a portion of the Colorado Rockies.   

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: us, weather, winter, storm, snow, rain, midwest, ice, northeast
  • 25
    Jan
    2013
    6:33pm, EST

    Frigid temperatures continue to blast Northeast, Midwest; ice hits the South

    The nation is in the grips of a blast of cold Arctic air with temperatures falling to some of the lowest marks in years and wind chills plummeting to dangerously low levels. NBC's Jay Gray reports.

    By Andrew Mach, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Capping off a brutal week of frigid conditions and subzero wind chills, residents across much of the country on Friday were still experiencing some of the coldest temperatures in years — with southern states getting a rare icy blast.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Peak temperatures from the Northeast to the Midwest were slated to range from single digits to the 30s, and forecasters said freezing air temperatures and the chance of precipitation could mean snow in both regions.


    "This is actually quite an impressive mass of cold air," Richard Castro, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service told NBCChicago.com.

    By mid-afternoon on Friday, Pennsylvania was feeling the first of a "widespread storm, impacting the entire state," said state's transportation department spokesman Steve Chizmar.

    Snow was falling over most of the state, and forecasters predicted a total of 1 to 4 inches through Saturday morning, while transportation department crews stayed busy plowing and salting the roads.

    Hundreds of schools in the state dismissed classes early Friday.

    Only a light dusting, if any accumulation, was expected in New York City, where real-feel temperatures were below zero Friday morning, NBCNewYork.com reported.

    Slideshow: Deep Freeze

    Timothy A. Clary / AFP - Getty Images

    A man photographs the fountain at Bryant Park in New York on Friday as the arctic air has turned the fountain into an ice sculpture.

    Launch slideshow

    In the Midwest, one of the first snowfalls of the season in Chicago created a few slick spots on the roads Friday morning, causing at least a dozen accidents, including an eight-vehicle crash, NBCChicago.com reported. Only minor injuries had been reported.

    Though little snow accumulated it was still record breaking. The 1.1 inches recorded Friday morning broke the city’s 335-day stretch of no more than an inch of snow accumulation in one day.

    The National Weather Service had winter weather advisories in effect for the eastern seaboard from North Carolina to southern New Jersey, and issued blizzard warnings for northern Georgia.

    Parts of Kentucky were reporting as much as half inch of ice accumulation, Weather.com reported. Slick roads in the southeast of the state were making driving hazardous, causing more than 100 accidents in Pulaski County alone, it said.

    Tennessee was also slick with ice in the east, and reported some power outages, while freezing rain caused a number of school systems in central and southern Kentucky to cancel classes, according to WLEX-TV.

    Because cold temperatures can be dangerous, officials advised residents to heed cold-weather tips, including wearing gloves, wearing a mouth covering to protect the lungs from bitter cold air, layering loose-fitting, warm clothing and wearing a hat to retain body heat.

    Animal advocates also urged pet owners to only take elderly dogs, puppies and short-haired dogs outside when it is absolutely necessary. If a dog whines frequently or keeps lifting its paws up while on a walk, it may need boots. Cat owners should keep their animals inside at all times in such bitter cold, NBCChicago.com reported.

    The forecast for next week called for some relief from the arctic temperatures of late, beginning with sunny skies and temperatures hitting the mid-40s to 50s by the middle of the week. 

    Kari Huus, NBC Staff Writer, contributed to this report.

    Leaving snow and ice in its wake, Winter Storm Khan is churning toward the Mid-Atlantic. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    16 comments

    DAMN GLOBAL WARMING........

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