Snowstorm Targets 70 Million in Northeast, Midwest

Play videoAccuWeather – by Alex Sosnowski

Two storms will merge quickly enough to produce a major snowstorm from the upper part of the mid-Atlantic to southern New England Thursday into Friday.

The storm will affect more than 70 million people in the Midwest and the Northeast combined and could have a major negative impact on travel for people returning from holiday destinations, heading back to school or resuming business activities.  

It will be far from the worst storm to ever hit the area, but people should be prepared for flight delays and cancellations because of direct and indirect impacts from the far-reaching storm.

AccuWeather.com Chief Operating Officer Evan Myers said, “The storms will not organize fast enough to make the perfect storm, but it will cause a significant amount of snow to fall over a large area.”

Deicing operations will put some airlines behind schedule. Aircraft and crews may not be where they are supposed to be, even if the weather is clear.

As colder air invades the storm, snow will stick to the roads and make for slippery conditions.

The worst of the storm is likely to be Thursday night but will cause enough snow to make roads slippery as early as Thursday in some locations.

The storm is forecast to bring a large area of 6- to 12-inch snowfall from northeastern Pennsylvania to a large part of New Jersey and southeastern New York state to southern New England. This includes the entire metropolitan area of New York City and Long Island, northward to Albany, N.Y., and Scranton and Allentown, Pa. Over a foot of snow will fall in localized areas of Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut and the cities of Hartford, Conn., Providence, R.I., and Boston.

Within the heaviest snow area, the snow will fall at the rate of 2 to 4 inches per hour in some locations, making it difficult for plows to keep up.

 

A significant, but lesser snowfall is in store farther southwest in Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington, D.C., and farther north in Portland, Maine, Burlington, Vt., and Pittsburgh.

For many areas this will be a dry, powdery snow. However, along the mid-Atlantic coast and even southern New England coast for a brief time, a wintery mix will occur early. However, as colder air invades the storm, the all snow will fall and the snow will become powdery as well.

The storm will strengthen quickly enough to kick up winds. Blowing and drifting snow will occur during the middle and last part of the storm from Pennsylvania to New England. In parts of New England a full-blown blizzard may evolve.

The wind will cause waves to build along the New England and the mid-Atlantic coast. Where these winds are onshore longest, over eastern New England and along the north shore of Long Island, flooding at times of high tide is likely, along with beach erosion. The new moon on New Year’s Day will contribute to higher tide levels during part of the storm.

The coldest air of the season so far will empty out of eastern Canada on gusty winds in the wake of the storm. For some locations it will bring the coldest weather in several years.

Areas from New England to much of the mid-Atlantic will be very cold Friday into Saturday, while travel conditions will improve.

According to Long Range Weather Expert Jack Boston, “If New York’s Central Park fails to reach 20 degrees for a high temperature on Friday, it will be the first time this has occurred since Jan. 16, 2009.”

In the South, the colder air will be accompanied by a biting wind as well.

The southern part of the two storms is set to join up in the Northeast and will bring drenching rain to parts of the South and along the lower mid-Atlantic coast for a time Thursday.

The second of the two storms slated to join forces will spread a swath of accumulating snow eastward from Iowa and Illinois to Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky, West Virginia and part of lower Michigan and southern Wisconsin Tuesday into New Year’s Day.

Another storm may eye the Northeast with snow, a wintry mix and rain Sunday night and Monday as 2014 kicks winter up to a whole new level of intensity. Very cold air could also make a far-reaching appearance from the Midwest to the Northeast next week.

http://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/northeast-snowstorm-alert-thursday/21493316

37 thoughts on “Snowstorm Targets 70 Million in Northeast, Midwest

    1. Lol , no kidding
      Like as if it’s not winter or something
      In the past few years in my area we have had some very mild winters , were due .. It’s like people have forgotten this is what happens up here in the winter

  1. AHAHAHAHAHAHAHhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!!!!!

    SNOW!!!,…

    OH MY GOD!!!,…

    Must be CLIMATE CHANGE!!!!!

    AHAHAHAHAHHHHHHhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Where is Al Gore when we need him to save the planet from Global Warming!!!??????,…

    AHHHHHhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!!!!!!!!!

    …………OH,.. wait,… snow is the opposite of, “Global Warming”,… isn it???

    Hhhhmmmm,……

    Never mind.

    JD – US Marines – Happy New Years All My Fellow Patriots!!!!!,.. and to ALL the commies in this country,… DROP DEAD!

          1. I guess no one is really worried about that Snowstorm in this article. Everyone’s too busy ringing in the New Years. HAHAHA!!! 🙂

  2. Sure beats the ice storm I was in the middle of last week. 7 days without electricity kinda puts things in perspective. Fortunately I own a generator…runs the furnace, the water pump and a few lights but not much else. You guys should have heard the trees cracking across the countryside….sounded like gunshots…lol.

  3. OK now, I am ready for spring. I am tired of these 20+ below temps. and that is not the wind chill, that is betwen -40 and 80 below so the weather man says. Ha 23 below right now out side.

          1. No lettin` the fire go out in these temp.s tammyc, I did that the other night and froze the water pipes 😉

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