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Snow and Ice Predicted for Parts of New England Winter Storm Expected to Bring Snow and Ice to Northeast
(32 minutes later)
A storm system that brought heavy snow and strong winds to the Great Plains and the Midwest was moving toward the Northeast on Sunday, potentially complicating travel, forecasters said. A storm system that brought heavy snow and strong winds to the Great Plains and the Midwest was moving toward the Northeast on Sunday, forecasters said, threatening to complicate holiday travel plans.
Through Monday and into Tuesday, the storm could bring four to eight inches of snow to parts of New England as well as freezing rain to areas of Vermont, New Hampshire, Eastern New York and Western Massachusetts, Andrew Orrison, a meteorologist with the Weather Prediction Center, said. As of Sunday morning, the storm had brought 14 inches of snow in Fargo, N.D., and about a foot in western Nebraska and northern South Dakota. The system is expected to move across the Great Lakes and arrive in New England by Tuesday morning, bringing the possibility of severe ice storms, said Patrick Burke, a meteorologist with the Weather Prediction Center in College Park, Md.
“It could be rather damaging for some of the areas up through there where you can have down trees, power lines, and as a result, power outages to a number of people,” he said on Sunday.
Major cities in the Northeast are expected to only see rain, but Boston could get snow and freezing rain, Mr. Orrison said.
As of Sunday morning, the storm had brought at least 14 inches of snow in Fargo, N.D., and about a foot in western Nebraska and northern South Dakota.
The system is expected to move across the Great Lakes and arrive in New England by Tuesday morning, bringing the possibility of severe ice storms, said Patrick Burke, a meteorologist with the Weather Prediction Center in College Park, Md.
Several airlines issued travel notices for the upper Midwest as a result of the weather, including United Airlines, American Airlines and Delta Air Lines, offering people who are traveling just ahead of the new year the chance to change tickets without being charged a fee.Several airlines issued travel notices for the upper Midwest as a result of the weather, including United Airlines, American Airlines and Delta Air Lines, offering people who are traveling just ahead of the new year the chance to change tickets without being charged a fee.
Mr. Burke said the worst weather was not expected to hit major airports. Mr. Burke said that snow and ice could affect air travel in Boston but that the worst weather was not expected to hit major airports.
“It’s not the type of weather that would close down a major airport,” he said. “Maybe expect some delays, but not too bad, considering.”“It’s not the type of weather that would close down a major airport,” he said. “Maybe expect some delays, but not too bad, considering.”
Temperatures on Monday and Tuesday are expected to be above normal for parts of the Northeast. Road travel, particularly in the upper Midwest or the Great Plains, could be dangerous, he said.
“Tomorrow, portions of the Mid-Atlantic are actually going to feel like spring,” Mr. Orrison said on Sunday, adding that some places could see temperatures “well into the 60s and even the 70s” near Washington. As the storm intensifies, strong winds will affect some of these areas, causing poor visibility and “making the driving conditions quite hazardous, if not locally impossible, for the next couple of days,” Andrew Orrison, a meteorologist with the Weather Prediction Center, said.
Farther north, temperatures will be lower, in the 30s and 40s, but “that’s actually going to be above normal for this time of the year.” “We’re looking at areas of Missouri, up in Iowa, as far south as eastern Oklahoma and western Arkansas seeing some heavy rains,” he said.
Mr. Orrison said New Year’s Eve is expected to be mild, with “no real extreme cold anywhere across the Northeast.” For Sunday and Monday, across a large area of the Midwest, temperatures could be as much as 30 degrees above normal, he said.
In New York City, revelers awaiting the new year in Times Square will see dry conditions and temperatures near 40 toward late evening. Come Monday, areas further east, including the Ohio Valley, could see unusually high temperatures.
“Many of these areas are going to be seeing temperatures well up into the 50s and the 60s,” Mr. Orrison said. “Much warmer than it should be for this time of the year.”
The temperatures are a function of the storm, he said, which is bringing up warmer air from the South.