Northeast US Digs Out From Storm

by Brian A Kennedy | December 17, 2007 at 05:44 am
904 views | 12 Recommendations | 14 comments

Photos

snowy wreath

snowy wreath

see larger image

uploaded by kayreVT

Massive snow dumps in the eastern part of the US over the weekend, with up to ten inches falling in some parts around the Great Lakes. NYC was strangely spared -- we just got a lot of extremely unpleasant snow/rain combo action.

DETROIT - A pre-winter blend of snow, sleet and freezing rain cut visibility and iced over highways from the Great Lakes to New England, dumping more than 10 inches of snow in parts of Michigan and Vermont, stranding air and road travelers and causing a jetliner to skid off a runway.

 
School districts across the region — including Michigan's largest, in Detroit — canceled classes for Monday. Slippery roads were blamed for two traffic deaths over the weekend in Michigan, and one each in Wisconsin and Pennsylvania.

 
Before the snowfall eased up Sunday night, 10.5 inches had fallen in Michigan's Ann Arbor, and a similar amount in Jackson County, the National Weather Service said.

 
"It's winter," said Ann Arbor resident Linda Thelen, 53, as she and her husband dug out their home. "I expect a couple of these each year."

 
In upstate New York, high winds kicked up Monday morning and blew around some of the foot of snow that fell.

 
In Rhode Island, a U.S. Airways Express Flight from Philadelphia carrying 31 passengers and three crew members slid off the runway as it tried to land at T.F. Green Airport, which got nearly 8 inches of snow. No injuries were reported, but the airport had to close its runways for about 2 1/2 hours. Barb Jones, a spokeswoman for Air Wisconsin, which operates the jet, said the incident was under investigation.

 
The storm canceled hundreds of flights at airports in Chicago and about 300 flights at Boston's busy Logan International Airport. Flights were also canceled at airports in Portland, Maine; Buffalo, N.Y.; and Manchester, N.H.

 
Few major problems — though plenty of delays — were reported at airports in Philadelphia and the New York area, which had braced for plenty of snow but got mostly sleet and rain.

 
Every available plow truck was at work in Vermont, said Reggie Brown, highway department dispatcher in Montpelier. "Everybody's out and running," he said.

 
A winter storm warning remained in effect until 7 a.m. Monday in upstate New York cities from Buffalo to Albany. Parts of Franklin County had more than 15 inches.

 
Braving the elements Sunday in New York were fans of teen singer Hannah Montana, whose concert in Rochester drew Jolene Horton and her 8-year-old daughter, Paxtyn Brown.

 
They spent five hours on the road from Schuyler County in the Finger Lakes. "Normally it would have taken 2 1/2 hours, but we wouldn't have missed it for the world," Horton said.

 
AAA Michigan said it helped more than 3,000 motorists on Sunday. Most had spun out, gotten stuck in a ditch or couldn't start their vehicles, spokeswoman Nancy Cain said.

 
Many churches hit by the storm canceled Sunday morning services as law enforcement officials encouraged motorists to stay off the roads, if possible, until conditions improved.

 
The storm led several museums, such as the Detroit Institute of Arts and the Port Huron Museum, to close their doors for the day because of the weather.

 
University of Michigan's winter commencement in nearby Ann Arbor was held as scheduled on Sunday afternoon. Rasheed Mathis, 27, drove from Detroit to see his cousin graduate.

 
"It was nasty," he said of the drive. "Just nasty, but he came to see me graduate and I wanted to be there for him."

 
The storm also didn't keep fans away from the New England Patriots-New York Jets game at Foxborough, Mass., but they had to shovel off their seats in the stadium. A video of a fire roaring in a fireplace was shown on the scoreboards.

 
In northeast Pennsylvania, ice and high winds toppled two 800-foot television towers on Penobscot Mountain in Luzerne County, knocking several stations off the air for many viewers.

 
The storm came less than a week after an ice storm in the Midwest and Northeast that was blamed for at least 38 deaths, mostly in traffic accidents. Thousands of homes and businesses still had no electricity in parts of Oklahoma, Kansas and Missouri.

 
In Oklahoma City on Sunday, utility crews worked to restore electricity to more than 150,000 homes and businesses that remained without power.

 
While the utility companies reported significant progress, it was little solace to Choctaw resident Beverly Smith, whose trailer in the southern part of the city remained without power Sunday for the seventh straight day.

 
"We don't have anywhere to go," said Smith, who lives in the trailer with her 15-year-old son. "We're out of money. Christmas is nine days away, and I have no hope of giving my family a Christmas all."


 

recommend This comment thread is now closed
Rob Walker
Rob Walker
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 05:58 on December 17th, 2007

As someone who spent most of the weekend hunkered inside while the storm blew through, I certainly appreciate this story, thanks BK!

0
artsy_T

Shot from my apartment window, yesterday morning. It's a winter wonderland here in Michigan.

artsy_T has contributed a photo to this story.

0
smccracken

Once the nor'easter passed VT I walked outside to find the walkway under nearly 2 feet of snow. As of this morning we're still digging out - not quite as bad as the Valentine's Day blizzard last year, but this was quite a storm.

smccracken has contributed a photo to this story.

0
beembag

I was too chicken to head out in the storm so I stuck myself in my condo all day. Here's a shot taken from the warmth and safety of my abode.

beembag has contributed a photo to this story.

0
sometimes everything girl

The sky was a magnificent color as the impending snow storm approached.

sometimes everything girl has contributed a photo to this story.

0
smuncky

Taken at the Don Valley Brick Works in Toronto.

smuncky has contributed a photo to this story.

ryan
ryan
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 12:01 on December 17th, 2007

Brian A Kennedy, looks like the Northeast has really been walloped.

0
mandarinsheldrake



mandarinsheldrake has contributed a photo to this story.

 

Just some shots of the storm from downtown detroit in the Cass/Fort Area and Washington Blvd.

0
mandarinsheldrake

dupe

0
Doll_Murderer

Lots of snow. probably more than the predicted forecast...anyhow just an idea of how climate is changing.

Doll_Murderer has contributed a photo to this story.

0
najmk

Sunday December 16, 2007.

I open my eyes that morning and realise that the sun and the blue sky have gone south on vacation. It is a cold and chilly morning. It snowed all night long and apparently it's going to snow all day.

I enter my living room, open my balcony and feel the cool rush of air pass through my feet. It's quiet. Everyone is probably hybernating except for the wind. It's working full time (and getting paid overtime) providing windchills upto -16 celsius.

Somewhere around midday I see life. I see birds sitting and chirping in groups on the tree right outside my balcony. I see people in layers of clothing walking on the sidewalk - Are they drunk? Why do they keep slipping? Oh wait, its the snow.

Life has started. This storm isn't going to stop people in Toronto. Our routine has to continue, be it doing laundry, going for groceries, or a simple drive to enjoy the heavenly snowfall.

najmk has contributed a photo to this story.

0
najmk

Sunday December 16, 2007.

I open my eyes that morning and realise that the sun and the blue sky have gone south on vacation. It is a cold and chilly morning. It snowed all night long and apparently it's going to snow all day.

I enter my living room, open my balcony and feel the cool rush of air pass through my feet. It's quiet. Everyone is probably hybernating except for the wind. It's working full time (and getting paid overtime) providing windchills upto -16 celsius.

Somewhere around midday I see life. I see birds sitting and chirping in groups on the tree right outside my balcony. I see people in layers of clothing walking on the sidewalk - Are they drunk? Why do they keep slipping? Oh wait, its the snow.

Life has started. This storm isn't going to stop people in Toronto. Our routine has to continue, be it doing laundry, going for groceries, or a simple drive to enjoy the heavenly snowfall.

najmk has contributed a photo to this story.

0
najmk

Sunday December 16, 2007.

I open my eyes that morning and realise that the sun and the blue sky have gone south on vacation. It is a cold and chilly morning. It snowed all night long and apparently it's going to snow all day.

I enter my living room, open my balcony and feel the cool rush of air pass through my feet. It's quiet. Everyone is probably hybernating except for the wind. It's working full time (and getting paid overtime) providing windchills upto -16 celsius.

Somewhere around midday I see life. I see birds sitting and chirping in groups on the tree right outside my balcony. I see people in layers of clothing walking on the sidewalk - Are they drunk? Why do they keep slipping? Oh wait, its the snow.

Life has started. This storm isn't going to stop people in Toronto. Our routine has to continue, be it doing laundry, going for groceries, or a simple drive to enjoy the heavenly snowfall.

najmk has contributed a photo to this story.

0
kayreVT

Snow on my back deck in Vergennes, Vermont

kayreVT has contributed a photo to this story.

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

What is NowPublic?

NowPublic lets people work together to cover news events around the world.

Find out more

Crowd Power

Rob Walker
First Flagged at 5:58 AM, Dec 17, 2007 by Rob Walker
These members have powered this story:

Most Recommended Stories in World

 

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from