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Tua Pek Kong gave Hell to USA 2018 starting BOMB CYCLONE & Freeze Ass!

botakboon

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/04/us/winter-snow-bomb-cyclone.html

Live Briefing
‘Bomb Cyclone’ Pummels Northeast, Whipping the East Coast With Snow and Bitter Cold

By THE NEW YORK TIMESUPDATED 6:40 AM

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Waves crashed over houses in Scituate, Mass., on Thursday. Credit Scott Eisen/Getty Images
In Boston, the highest tide in nearly 40 years flooded a subway station near the New England Aquarium. Pipes cracked from New Jersey to North Carolina. Even Florida’s iguanas found themselves stunned by the cold.

From the Spanish moss-canopied sidewalks of Savannah, Ga., to icy villages in coastal Maine, emergency officials reckoned with the rages, whims and remains of a storm that shut down schools for more than a million children, flooded roadways, filled homeless shelters and forced the cancellations of thousands of flights.

Yet the storm, notable for a steep drop in atmospheric pressure that prompted some forecasters to describe it as a “bomb cyclone,” was but one act in a prolonged run of misery that has already enveloped millions of people in a wintry torment of Arctic air and snow-blown streets.

Here’s the latest:

• Wind chills are expected to repeatedly plunge below zero in some areas for the next several days, at least, and utility companies scrambled Thursday to restore electricity to tens of thousands of homes and businesses. Read more on how power companies have warned of possible fuel shortages to come.

• All along the Eastern Seaboard, roads — iced-over, snow-covered or slush-filled — were treacherous on Thursday and likely to remain that way for a few days. Some states, including New York, imposed restrictions on some roads and limited truck travel.

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• The storm’s path through some of the busiest air travel corridors in the country prompted airlines to cancel more than 4,000 flights, according to FlightAware, an aviation tracking website. Carriers have already abandoned plans for more than 600 flights on Friday.

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Icy water, pushed by a high tide, has flooded parts of Boston.
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Coastal regions like Hull, Mass., were being hit hard by the storm on Thursday. Credit Scott Eisen/Getty Images'
A three-foot tidal surge pushed floodwaters into the Long Wharf area of downtown Boston, turning one of the city’s popular tourist destinations into a slushy mess filled with flashing fire trucks and a red inflatable raft. The water flowed into buildings and down the steps of the Aquarium mass transit station, and firefighters rescued one person from a car trapped in the water nearly up to its doorhandles, according to Joseph Finn, the commissioner of the Boston Fire Department.

“This is the first time I’ve ever seen the water come this high in the downtown area,” Commissioner Finn said, as the flooded roads turned slushy behind him and the wind whipped heavy snow through the air.

Commissioner Finn said firefighters were inspecting flooded buildings to see which ones could pose a fire risk. He said firefighters had made a small number of additional rescues in coastal areas of the city, helping people out of stranded cars in the icy water.

“The tough part of this is it’s going to repeat itself at 12:30 tonight,” Commissioner Finn said, referring to the next high tide.

To the north, in Salem, Mass., Capt. Conrad Prosniewski said several houses there had been flooded, forcing people to leave their homes, and added that emergency officials had rescued a few stranded motorists who drove into flooded areas.

“It’s an astronomical high tide, and then we’re adding a couple feet of storm surge,” said Chris Miller, the harbormaster in Brewster, Mass., on Cape Cod, where part of Highway 6A, a main artery through the Cape, was overtopped by water and closed on Thursday. Mr. Miller added, “This storm happens to be hitting when the tides are extremely high.”

Boston Common was almost silent as it began to fill with snow on Thursday, enveloped in a white haze interrupted only by the odd spray of Christmas lights or a solitary silhouette walking through the park. Ten to 16 inches of snow were forecast during the day, with another 1 to 3 inches possible in the evening. The city’s streets were largely empty, too, suggesting many drivers had heeded Gov. Charlie Baker’s advice to stay off the roads and work from home if they could.

But some workers here did not have that option, despite the authorities’ dire warnings. Bitalina Diaz, 38, rode the Orange Line toward her job cleaning offices in downtown Boston, with her pants tucked into her boots and her hood up to buffet the effects of the chilly wind.

“I hope I can get a train back,” Ms. Diaz said. “I don’t know what happens — it’s a lot of snow.”

New York was walloped, and can expect a freezing night.
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A car was stuck in deep snow near Asbury Park, N.J. on Thursday. Credit Julio Cortez/Associated Press'
In New York, six inches of snow had piled up in parts of Brooklyn and Queens by noon, while sections of Long Island were coated in nine inches. Wind gusts topped 40 miles per hour in the city and neared 60 miles per hour on Long Island.

The storm stopped flights at La Guardia Airport and John F. Kennedy International Airport, canceled trains, slowed traffic to a crawl and sent squalls of snow flying into underground subway stations and through the corridors between Manhattan skyscrapers.

The National Weather Service updated its forecast to predict eight inches of snow in New York City and 15 inches on the eastern end of Long Island. The region braced for nights ahead of toe-numbing cold, with Mayor Bill de Blasio saying it could feel like minus 20 degrees on Friday and Saturday nights with the wind chill. Read more here.

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A snowy start to the day in Atlantic City, N.J., on Thursday. Credit Matt Rourke/Associated Press
The snow was blowing sideways on the Jersey Shore.
The first plows were out before 6 a.m. in Asbury Park, N.J., scraping at pavement in a cloud of wind-whipped snow that funneled horizontally down Ocean Avenue and the Boardwalk like a powdery fog, making a blurry watercolor of the waterfront and its street lamps.

Michelle Ramos insisted on driving her husband, Rogelio Perez, to his job in nearby Wall Township at Fire Hooks Unlimited, a small manufacturer and distributor of firefighter and emergency services supplies.

“He can’t stay home; he’ll drive me crazy,” Ms. Ramos, 46, said on her way back to Asbury Park at around 7 a.m., stopping at a QuickChek convenience store on Main Street in Bradley Beach to pick up coffee, bread and a few other staples.

Ms. Ramos, describing herself as both “the driver” and “the head of the household,” was preparing to spend the rest of Thursday at home with her children and grandchildren, a group of six ranging in age from 2 to 28. She planned to clean up around the house a bit, and make a pot of stewed chicken and rice.

Ms. Ramos said that whether or not her husband’s workplace was open today, “He would have to show up, because if not he won’t get paid for the day.”

She added that he was on his own for the ride back. “He can get home whenever,” Ms. Ramos quipped.

Officials in North Carolina link three deaths to the storm.
Gov. Roy Cooper of North Carolina said two men died when a pickup truck overturned in an icy creek in Moore County, and a third death has been reported in Beaufort County.

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A plow cleared snow in Bellport, N.Y., on Thursday. Credit Andrew Theodorakis/Getty Images'
“We still don’t know the full effects at this time, but we do know that the winds out there have been ferocious,” Mr. Cooper said on Thursday, urging North Carolinians to stay home. High winds and low temperatures have kept crews from clearing many of the roads.

State troopers have received more than 1,000 calls since the storm started, more than 700 of which were related to car crashes.

Overnight, about 20,000 people in North Carolina were without power, but that number was down to about 6,500 by Thursday morning.

In Virginia, more than 40,000 homes and businesses were without power.
The Weather Service said cities along the Atlantic Ocean and the Chesapeake Bay could get about a foot of snow, and the Virginia Department of Transportation said more than 600 roads had been affected.

“Virginians should keep a close watch on the local weather forecast and stay off roads during this weather event unless travel is absolutely necessary,” the governor’s office said in a statement on Thursday, one day after Gov. Terry McAuliffe declared an emergency for the commonwealth.

The Port of Virginia was closed to inbound and outbound traffic, and rail and air services were canceled or delayed. The state said National Guard troops were on standby to help move emergency officials through deep snow in the Hampton Roads region, which includes Newport News, Norfolk and Virginia Beach and is home to more than 1.7 million people.

The area is not expected to inch above freezing temperatures until Sunday — and even then, the high will be only 33 degrees, according to the Weather Service.

Temperatures are expected to dip into the single digits on Thursday night, and wind chills could hit minus 7.

In Washington, the National Weather Service predicted a Thursday high of 28 degrees, with winds gusting to 40 m.p.h. Temperatures are not expected to reach the 40s — maybe — until Monday.

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Workers cleared the sidewalks in Boston on Thursday. “It’s going to look pretty rough out there,” Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts said of conditions in the city. Credit Spencer Platt/Getty Images
A Mainer says it’s a nice day for a run.
In Maine, where the Weather Service issued a warning for hurricane-force winds along the coast, residents were taking the harsh wintry conditions in stride.

Mish Sommers, 46, who lives in Lincolnville, Me., went for a run Thursday in whiteout conditions with ice cleats on her shoes. “Probably should have run in snowshoes,” she said.

She said she loved being part of the stillness outdoors. “What happens when the snow falls with this kind of intensity, it gets so quiet,” she said. “There’s a very hushed sense of everything being so gentle around us.”

Cooper Funk, 38, a vegetable farmer, in Camden, Me., who is a fifth-generation Californian, said the he was worried about the wind, which was roaring around his house at more than 40 miles per hour, though his high tunnels, or hoop houses, where he grows his vegetables, were still standing.

What exactly is a ‘bomb cyclone,’ or bombogenesis?
When discussing the storm, some weather forecasters have referred to a “bomb cyclone.” Calling it a bomb sounds dire, but such storms are not exceedingly rare — there was one in New England recently.

What makes a storm a bomb is how fast the atmospheric pressure falls; falling atmospheric pressure is a characteristic of all storms. By definition, the barometric pressure must drop by at least 24 millibars in 24 hours for a storm to be called a bomb cyclone; the formation of such a storm is called bombogenesis.

Here is how it works: Deep drops in barometric pressure occur when a region of warm air meets one of cold air. The air starts to move, and the rotation of the Earth creates a cyclonic effect. The direction is counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere (when viewed from above), leading to winds that come out of the northeast — a nor’easter.

That’s what happened at the end of October, when warm air from the remnants of a tropical cyclone over the Atlantic collided with a cold front coming from the Midwest. Among other effects then, more than 80,000 customers in Maine lost power as high winds toppled trees.

A similar effect was occurring Wednesday, as warm air over the ocean met extremely cold polar air that had descended over the East. Pressure was expected to fall quickly from Florida northward.

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Extreme Weather By DREW JORDAN and CHRIS CIRILLO 1:26
Is a ‘Bomb Cyclone’ as Scary as It Sounds?
Continue reading the main story Video
Is a ‘Bomb Cyclone’ as Scary as It Sounds?
Bomb cyclones have been referred to as “winter hurricanes.” Our science reporter explains how they really work.

By DREW JORDAN and CHRIS CIRILLO on Publish Date January 3, 2018. Photo by Alba Vigaray/European Pressphoto Agency. Watch in Times Video »
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Why is it so cold? What’s the influence of climate change?
Some scientists studying the connection between climate change and cold spells, which occur when cold Arctic air dips south, say that they may be related. But the importance of the relationship is not fully clear yet.

The Arctic is not as cold as it used to be — the region is warming faster than any other — and studies suggest that this warming is weakening the jet stream, which ordinarily acts like a giant lasso, corralling cold air around the pole.

The reason a direct connection between cold weather and global warming is still up for debate, scientists say, is that there are many other factors involved. Ocean temperatures in the tropics, soil moisture, snow cover, even the long-term natural variability of large ocean systems all can influence the jet stream. Read more here.

Those iguanas falling from trees in Florida? They probably aren’t dead.
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A stunned iguana in Boca Raton, Fla., on Thursday. Credit Frank Cerabino/Palm Beach Post, via Associated Press
When temperatures dip into the 30s and 40s, Floridians know to be on the lookout for reptiles stunned — but not necessarily killed — by the cold. They can come back to life again in the warmth.

In Boca Raton, Frank Cerabino, a Palm Beach Post columnist familiar with the creatures, stepped outside and saw a bright green specimen by his pool on Thursday morning, feet up.

“He didn’t move,” Mr. Cerabino said. “But he’s probably still alive. My experience is that they take a while to die.” Read more here.

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Across the South, many people reveled in their rare taste of winter.
In Wilmington, N.C., most people did not expect to get any snow this year, but more than three inches fell on Thursday, according to the Wilmington Star-News.

“We love it; we love having it actually be winter in the South and we love the Southern version of a sled: a boogie board,” Rachel Baldwin told the newspaper.

In Fredericksburg, Va., dozens of onlookers called the police to report that three swans had been hemmed in by ice on a pond, but were relieved to learn they weren’t frozen — they were just fake, according to the Free Lance-Star.

And the police in Greenville, N.C., said they caught two men who had broken into cars on Wednesday by tracking their footprints in the snow.

Correction: January 4, 2018
An earlier version of this article misidentified the state in which the Wilmington Star-News is located. It is in North Carolina, not Virginia.

Reporting was contributed by Patricia Mazzei, Daniel Victor and Henry Fountain from New York; Jess Bidgood from Boston; Sean Piccoli from Asbury Park, N.J.; and Alan Blinder from Atlanta.

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botakboon

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Not attacking Canada, the cold this time not coming from Canada, the storm is from Atlantic Coast, freezing Boston all the way to NY DC, & north Florida.

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Agoraphobic

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That was what happened to the dinosaurs when the ice age hit. They just didn't get a chance to wake up. The rodents ate them frozen!

Cheers!
 

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...ase-dont-pick-them-up/?utm_term=.d2979d76612e







Animalia
Iguanas are falling out of trees in Florida because it's so cold. Please don't pick them up.

by Herman Wong January 4 at 10:07 PM
1:08
Good Samaritan helps frozen Florida iguana
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Kay Pavkovich shared this video on Twitter showing her helping a frozen iguana warm up in the sun in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. on Jan. 4. (Kay Pavkovich/Twitter)

On Thursday morning, Frank Cerabino, a columnist for the Palm Beach Post, woke up to 40-degree weather and was greeted by a “frozen iguana” lounging by his pool in Boca Raton.

He responded as many people probably would: He shared a photo on social media. Then he pondered, “What do you do?” he told the New York Times.


One of the strongest winter storms on the East Coast in modern history has pummeled cities with snow and sleet, forcing schools and businesses to close while grounding thousands of flights.

And in South Florida, it is “raining iguanas.”

Green iguanas, like all reptiles, are coldblooded animals, so they become immobile when the temperature falls to a certain level, said Kristen Sommers of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. Under 50 degrees Fahrenheit, they become sluggish. Under 40 degrees, their blood stops moving as much, Sommers said.

They like to sit in trees, and “it’s become cold enough that they fall out.”

This is not a new phenomenon — there were similar reports in 2008 and 2010 — though it is not typical.

“The reality is South Florida doesn’t get that cold very often or long enough that you see this frequently,” Sommers said.

But what should one do with a fallen iguana?

[ Post Nation ‘Bomb cyclone’ batters Northeast with snow and ice, grounding thousands of flights ]

Cerabino told the New York Times that he prodded the iguana with a pool skimmer.

“He didn’t move,” Mr. Cerabino said. “But he’s probably still alive. My experience is that they take a while to die.”

Maxine Bentzel, a reporter at CBS12 News, suggested that “iguanas have a good chance of thawing out if you move them into the sun.”


The experts would prefer you didn’t.

Sommers said the reptiles could become frightened as they warm.

“Like any wild animal, it will try to defend itself,” she said.

[ Historic ‘bomb cyclone’ unleashes blizzard conditions from coastal Virginia to New England. Frigid air to follow. ]

And there are cautionary tales.

Ron Magill of the Miami Zoo told WPLG TV in 2010 about a man who collected sleeping iguanas and threw them into the back of his station wagon. Then they awoke.

“All of a sudden these things are coming alive, crawling on his back and almost caused a wreck.”

The situation was much worse for iguanas in 2010, when temperatures in South Florida fell to the low 30s, the Sun Sentinel reported.

“Neighborhoods resounded with the thud of iguanas dropping from trees onto patios and pool decks,” Sentinel reporter David Fleshler wrote.

Many iguanas died that year, as did other animals.

“Many pythons were reported dead, floating in the Everglades,” the Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission said in a statement to the Palm Beach Post.

The deaths resulted from both the low temperatures and the length of time of the frigid weather.

The iguana population has since recovered, to the consternation of residents.

“We have been receiving more calls from people that are experiencing wildlife conflicts with iguanas. … Iguanas in their yard that they are not happy about, you’ve seen them further north in large numbers,” Sommers said.

0:20
Frozen iguanas, one side effect of cold weather in Florida
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This video taken by Jenna Isola on her way to work in West Palm Beach on Jan. 4, appears to show a man carrying a large, stiff iguana out of a parking lot. (Jenna Isola/Facebook)

[ How climate change could counterintuitively feed winter storms ]

According to the Sentinel, iguanas arrived in Florida as pets, and once they escaped or were freed by their owners, first moved into Miami-Dade County in 1966, then to the Keys in 1995, before making a home of Broward County in 2001 and in Palm Beach in 2003.

The winter storm sweeping across parts of the East Coast has prompted animal rescue organizations and local authorities to issue warnings about giving pets shelter, with dogs left out to freeze to death in the cold.

In South Florida, the cooler temperatures also affect sea turtles, manatees and other creatures that hang out in trees.

“Bats sometimes will fall out of the roost of trees when we have a pretty cold snap,” Sommers said.

Sommers said that while she’s heard of falling iguanas on social media, the agency hasn’t gotten any reports.

“There have not been an influx of calls to FWC about people worried about iguanas falling out of trees,” she said. “It’s not like something you see every year.”

But this is no ordinary weather.

On Thursday, the National Weather Service issued a freeze warning for parts of South Florida. According to the Sun Sentinel, temperatures in the area will be the coldest since the cold snap in December 2010.



Read more:
 

Taksama_b_l

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http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-bomb-cyclone-polar-vortex-20180104-htmlstory.html


NATION
'Polar vortex' gives way to 'bomb cyclone.' This and other weather terms we love
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A squirrel on a fence in Battery Park in New York, braving the weather storm that has been called "bombogenesis" or "bomb cyclone." (Alba Vigaray / EPA-EFE)
By Jaclyn CosgroveContact Reporter
“Bomb cyclone” sounds more like a disaster movie title — with the trailer beginning with “In a world … ” — and in recent days the weather term has been trending, no doubt because of its violent imagery.

Turns out, bomb cyclone — also known as “bombogenesis” (really) — is less terrifying than it sounds.

Alan Dunham, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service near Boston, said weather experts use the term when describing certain types of winter storms.

“It certainly has gone around and got a wide distribution this time around,” Dunham said. “It’s a phrase that’s used — you can look it up in Wikipedia — just for a storm system that’s undergoing rapid intensification.”

Google doesn’t release numbers on searches but says that in the past week search interest in “bomb cyclone” was 120% higher than searches for “winter storm” in the U.S. The top three areas searching the term were the District of Columbia, New York and Rhode Island.

The storm currently gripping most of the nation has reminded us that, during a significant weather event, it’s good to have a handle on what meteorological terms mean.

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A woman photographs her English bulldog on a jetty next to ice-covered Cape Cod Bay near Rock Harbor, Mass. Scott Eisen / Getty Images
Winter hurricane
Although the term appears online and even in some news reports, it’s wrong. “There’s no such thing as a ‘winter hurricane,’ ” Dunham said.

Rather, for some storms, the National Weather Service will issue a warning about hurricane-force winds.

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Alison Mueller skied to work in Detroit in 2014, when a polar vortex weather pattern brought extremely cold weather to vast parts of the the U.S. Joshua Lott / Getty Images
Polar vortex
In 2014, “polar vortex” was the meteorological darling of Twitter. People of the internet provided many polar vortex memes.

That said, as the National Weather Service notes: “There are several things the polar vortex is NOT. Polar vortexes are not something new. The term ‘polar vortex’ has only recently been popularized, bringing attention to a weather feature that has always been present.”

The polar vortex is a large area of low pressure and cold air surrounding both of the Earth’s poles, according to the agency. It always exists near the poles, but weakens in summer and strengthens in winter.

“It’s not really a phrase I like — it makes it sound a lot worse than what it actually is," Todd Heitkamp, a warning coordination meteorologist for the weather service in Sioux Falls, S.D., told The Times in 2014. "This has happened before."

This winter, the memorable term has gotten some mention, but can’t compete with bomb cyclone.

Nor’easter
Also called a “northeaster” or even “no-theaster,” it’s used — wait for it — during Northeastern winters.

It’s an old term, with the Dictionary of American Regional English recording its first usage in 1774.

Here’s what the weather service says about it: “These winter weather events are notorious for producing heavy snow, rain, and tremendous waves that crash onto Atlantic beaches, often causing beach erosion and structural damage. Wind gusts associated with these storms can exceed hurricane force in intensity. A nor'easter gets its name from the continuously strong northeasterly winds blowing in from the ocean ahead of the storm and over the coastal areas.”

Bergy bits and more
The weather world abounds in terms sure to impress, or at least confuse.

Consider “bergy bit,” used to describe a piece of ice that has broken away from an iceberg. It can also refer to the remains of a melting iceberg.

The weather service uses the acronym “GoMoos” for “Gulf Of Maine Ocean Observing System.”

Then there’s “pancake ice,” which the weather services describes as “circular flat pieces of ice with a raised rim; the shape and rim are due to repeated collisions.”

And although “gustnado,” denotes a small whirlwind, “sharknado” is not in the weather service’s glossary of terms.

One word that millions of cold Americans, unable to drive, fly or leave their homes, cannot wait to hear? Summer.

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Hailstones were used to make a miniature snowman of sorts in Huntington Beach on March 2, 2015. Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times
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‘Bomb cyclone’ moves north, bringing blizzard conditions and frigid temps

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botakboon

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https://www.cbsnews.com/news/cold-w...-blizzard-flooding-latest-updates-2018-01-05/

Brutal cold follows massive winter storm on much of East Coast -- live updates


Last Updated Jan 5, 2018 1:05 PM EST

East Coast residents are bracing for a deep freeze a day after a massive winter storm slammed the region with heavy snow, hurricane-force winds and coastal flooding. Forecasters predict that record-breaking cold air and strong winds will set people's teeth chattering from the mid-Atlantic to New England Friday and that the frigid weather will hang around through the weekend.

The storm began two days ago in the Gulf of Mexico and first struck the Florida Panhandle. By Thursday, it was wreaking havoc as blizzard warnings and states of emergency went into effect along the Eastern Seaboard. Wind gusts hit more than 70 mph in places and some areas saw as much as 18 inches of snow.

The storm caused school and business closings, airline and rail service cancellations or reductions and thousands of utilities outages, many of them restored quickly. Some ferry services even had to be shut down along the Canadian coast.

In the South, Tallahassee, Florida, saw snow and residents of southeast Georgia were treated to a rare half-foot of snow. In New England, the powerful winds brought coastal flooding that reached historic levels in some communities with icy water overflowing piers, streets and restaurants and stranding some people who had to be rescued

Follow along with updates below as the storm works its way up the coast. All times Eastern unless otherwise indicated.

11:44 a.m.: Sledding girl killed by truck; snow plow kills man
Authorities say a girl struck by a pickup truck while sledding and a 75-year-old man hit by a snow plow while clearing business parking lots have died in Virginia in the aftermath of the snowstorm.

Police in Chesterfield County, a suburb of Richmond, Virginia, say the girl was sledding down a driveway when she slid into a road and was hit by the pickup truck Thursday. Police say in a statement that the driver immediately stopped and that the girl was taken to a hospital where she died of her injuries. The girl wasn't immediately identified.

In the greater Hampton area of southeast Virginia, authorities told The Virginia-Pilot that a 75-year-old private contractor, Barry Hale, was hit by the plow shortly after midday Thursday while clearing snow from parking lots in Buckroe. He died at a local hospital of his injuries. A police statement says the Virginia Department of Labor will conduct a follow-up investigation.

CBS News has confirmed that at least 19 people nationwide have died from the blast of winter weather and accompanying cold temperatures.

11:21 a.m.: Helicopter footage shows storm damage
CBS Boston station WBZ-TV has sent a helicopter above coastal communities in Massachusetts to survey storm damage. You can watch the footage in the player above.

10:57 a.m.: Cold temps close restrooms at Mississippi Capitol
Frigid weather is causing water pipes to burst underground in Mississippi's largest city.

The entire city of Jackson was put under a precautionary boil-water notice Thursday because of pressure problems.

Portable toilets were placed outside the state Capitol, where legislators are meeting. Some restrooms in the four-story building were blocked off because toilets wouldn't flush.

Temperatures in Mississippi have been at or below freezing for several days.

10:37 a.m.: Cancellations expected to continue as carriers regroup
As of late Friday morning, nearly 1,200 domestic or international flights involving the U.S. have been canceled, according to tracking website FlightAware.com.

On Thursday, nearly 4,400 flights were canceled.

FlightAware expected cancellations to continue through the morning at most Northeast airports as aircraft and crews are repositioned.

9:59 a.m.: Meal delivery driver finds man who froze to death
Authorities say a 64-year-old Ohio man whose body was found on the front porch of his home by a meal delivery driver froze to death.

The Akron Beacon Journal reports the Summit County Medical Examiner's Office on Thursday confirmed that Darnell Wilson, of Akron, died of hypothermia.

His body was found Tuesday by a woman delivering food for the Mobile Meals program. The high temperature in Akron reached just 14 degrees that day.

It's unclear how long Wilson had been on the partially enclosed porch before his body was found.

CBS News has confirmed that at least 19 people nationwide have died from the blast of winter weather and accompanying cold temperatures.

9:28 a.m.: Eroding coastline worries Maine man
The storm dumped more than a foot of snow in parts of Maine, CBS News correspondent Jericka Duncan reports from Saco, south of Portland.

Along the coast, powerful winds led to some of the worst tidal flooding in four decades.

Over the last decade, Sean Walker has seen how an eroding coastline in Saco threatens homes.

"My childhood memories are being washed away," Walker said.

On Thursday, he watched the storm pound the area once again.

"What's kind of going through your mind?" Duncan asked Walker.

"Cross your fingers," he said. "Really, cross your fingers and hope for the best."


9:05 a.m.: Supermoon intensified record coastal flooding
The storm's coastal flooding in New England reached levels not seen since the Blizzard of 1978, CBS News correspondent Don Dahler reports from Boston.

When floodwaters receded, the plummeting temperatures turned any left behind into ice.

The record flooding was caused by a disastrous mix of events. The storm hit during high tide, which was intensified by Monday's supermoon.

"It was just coming down, and it was like up to my waist," said Jennifer Cametti of Marshfield, Massachusetts. "I couldn't get back."

The National Guard used high-water trucks and even a bucket loader to rescue families stranded in their homes.

"It was scary, and I wanted to get out," said Nicole Cametti. "They came up to the front door and they- like he put me over his shoulders and put me in the car."


7:25 a.m.: Major airports resuming operations
Flights suspended at John F. Kennedy International Airport because of Thursday's massive snowstorm resumed Friday. Flights were suspended at JFK due to strong winds and whiteout conditions.

Air traffic suspensions at LaGuardia Airport have been lifted, but authorities advise passengers to contact their airlines regarding specific flights.

The flight-tracking site FlightAware reports nearly 5,000 canceled flights across the United States. Those flights include more than two-thirds of flights in and out of New York City and Boston airports.

6:45 a.m.: Progress vs. outages
Utility companies across the East reported some 21,000 homes and businesses had no electricity in the wake of the storm early Friday, down from almost 80,000 the day before, as crews fanned out to fix downed power lines and other problems, according to the Reuters news agency.

3:36 a.m.: Deadly toll grows
CBS News has confirmed 19 deaths from the huge storm and bone-chilling cold. Among them: several from traffic accidents, a body found on the shore of Lake Winnebago in Fond du Lac County, Wisconsin -- a death attributed to exposure -- and a man Greenup County, Kentucky who had no heat or electricity in the camper he was found in.

2:45 a.m.: "Chilly, chilly stuff"
The Arctic blast forecast to hit much of the upper-East Coast this weekend could make temperatures feel as low as minus-15 degrees from Philadelphia to Boston Friday and make residents of states such as Maryland and Virginia shiver from temperatures ranging from 10- to 15 degrees.

"This is chilly, chilly stuff," Brian Hurley, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service's Weather Prediction Center in College Park, Maryland, said Thursday.

Coastal areas in the Northeast, Hurley said, may experience numbing single digits. he South won't be spared, either. Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia can expect temperatures around 15 degrees to 20 degrees, Hurley said. Northern Florida will be in the 20s to low 30s.

Sunday morning should bring the coldest temperatures from Portland, Maine, to Washington, D.C. "That's when you'll see records being challenged or broken, with temperatures at or near zero in many places," Hurley said.

More seasonable weather is expected to return early next week with temperatures in the high 30s and near 40s, he said. For some, it will feel downright balmy.

Thursday, Jan. 4
10:55 p.m.: FlightAware's Misery Map shows tally of flight delays, cancellations

CBS News checks in with the online Misery Map from FlightAware that shows flight delays and cancellations across the country.

As of 10:55 p.m. ET, here are the latest information between 8 p.m. Jan. 4 and 12 a.m. Jan. 5:

  • New York: 7 delays // 69 cancellations
  • Washington, D.C.: 10 delays // 9 cancellations
  • Chicago: 37 delays // 5 cancellations
  • Florida: 16 delays / 7 cancellations
  • Atlanta: 24 delays // 1 cancellation
  • Denver: 19 delays // 1 cancellation
  • Los Angeles: 17 delays // 1 cancellation
9:45 p.m.: Latest forecast from CBS News weather producer
David Parkinson, CBS News weather producer, writes that the snow is done in New York and will be wrapping in the Boston area over the next few hours. With the exception of downeast Maine, the heavy snow is all done. The worst of the wind is also done. However, wind gusts will stick around overnight as the bone chilling temperatures move in.

In terms of snow totals, here are the largest in each state/notable cities:

  • New Jersey: Brick Township in Ocean County had 18" (Cape May had 17")
  • New York: Bohemia, Long Island 16.4" (NYC will wrap just shy of 10")
  • Connecticut: Canton 15"
  • Rhode Island: Pawtucket 16"
  • Massachusetts: Dedham 19"
  • Boston Logan Airport: 13.2"
  • New Hampshire: Seabrook 15"
  • Maine: Gorham 13.3"
Going forward, the temperature will just keep plunging. The high in Boston on Saturday is in the low single digits. It's 9 in NYC. The overnight low is around 0 in NYC and -10 in Boston Sunday morning. In terms of wind chills, temperatures won't be above zero for 48 hours in NYC. In Pittsburgh, it's closer to three days.

8:10 p.m.: Flights to resume at LaGuardia and JFK
New York's JFK Airport tweeted Wednesday that flights are scheduled to resume at 7 a.m. ET on Fri., Jan. 5.


The airport urges customers to check with their specific airliner for more details.

Earlier, JFK suspended flights Thursday because of the strong winds and blowing snow.

LaGuardia Airport tweeted Wednesday night that flight suspensions have been lifted.


6:40 p.m.: Storm washes away properties in Maine
Bone-chilling wind gusts of up to 50 mph made it difficult for residents to get around Portland, Maine, by car and foot.

Twenty miles south of Portland, on Ferry Beach, the storm swallowed up foundations, CBS News correspondent Jericka Duncan reports. Resident Sean Walker was one of many who watched his childhood memories get washed away.

Emergency management officials are bracing for a very long night.


6:30 p.m.: Snow plows struggling to keep up with storm conditions
Snow fell heavily in downtown Boston, and winds blew so hard that plows couldn't keep up with the storm, CBS News correspondent Don Dahler reports.

In Brant Rock, high winds sent frigid waters pouring high over the sea wall and into the streets. About 25 miles away, cars were washed away by the rising tide.

Further up the coast, in Scituate, wind and waves turned ice into projectiles. Town manager Jim Boudreau described the weather conditions as "wild."

And in New York, the storm was so fierce that 1,500 snow plows had trouble keeping the streets and highways clear of snow.


6 p.m.: South Carolina man killed in crash on icy roads
A man driving a pickup truck home from work on an icy South Carolina interstate has slid off the roadway, hit some trees and been killed.

Arther Cumbie Jr. is the state's first storm-related death from Wednesday's ice and snow.

Kershaw County coroner David West says Cumbie was driving at or below the speed limit Wednesday afternoon when his truck left Interstate 20. He says witnesses tell investigators Cumbie's truck started sliding on the ice and snow and he lost control.

West says Cumbie was wearing a seatbelt but died from head injuries.

The massive storm roared into the East Coast on Thursday, dumping as much as 18 inches of snow from the Carolinas to Maine and unleashing hurricane-force winds.

5:23 p.m.: More than 100K left without power
More than 100,000 customers lost power in the winter storm that's blanketed the East Coast with heavy snow and hurricane-force winds.

In the New England states, Massachusetts was hit with more than 22,000 outages Thursday afternoon. Scattered power outages were reported in New Hampshire and Rhode Island. Maine reported 4,400 outages.

About 6,300 customers lost power on Long Island on Thursday afternoon, but crews quickly restored more than 2,000 as of early Thursday evening.

Virginia had a peak of 45,000 outages, with about half restored as of early Thursday afternoon. The Carolinas experienced about 30,000 outages at its peak on Wednesday.

Forecasters expect the storm to be followed immediately by a blast of face-stinging cold air that could break records in more than two dozen cities this weekend.

5:05 p.m.: Several major airports close early due to winter weather
Airlines have now cancelled 4,020 flights nationwide due to the blizzard on the East Coast, CBS News transportation correspondent Kris Van Cleave reports.

The storm has shut down several major airports, including John F. Kennedy International Airport until 8 p.m., LaGuardia Airport until 6 p.m. and Logan International Airport until 5:30 p.m., according to Van Cleave. Baltimore-Washington International Airport and Philadelphia International Airport both remain open, but are not accepting diversions at this time. Newark Liberty International Airport has one runway open; however, flights have not been able to land due to crosswinds and poor conditions for landing.

In total, there have been 103 diversions from East Coast airports.

Van Cleave reports 614 flights remain cancelled for Friday.

3:59 p.m.: Passenger killed when car on snowy hill hits train
Authorities say a person is dead after the car they were traveling in couldn't stop at the bottom of a steep, snow-covered hill and slammed into a commuter train on its way to Philadelphia.

Police say the driver of the car was able to escape before the crash Thursday morning in Lower Moreland but the passenger stayed inside as the vehicle crashed through a gate at the railroad crossing. That person was later found by police along the tracks.

A spokeswoman for the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority says none of the passengers on board the West Trenton line train were injured. The train was about 20 miles north of downtown Philadelphia.

It happened as the winter storm was blowing snow, icing up roads and causing traffic havoc around the region.

CBS News has confirmed that at least 13 people nationwide have died from the blast of winter weather and accompanying cold temperatures.

3:12 p.m.: Storm causes over 3K flight cancellations
As of Thursday afternoon, over 3,600 flights have been canceled in the U.S., according to tracking website FlightAware.com.

Amid the traveling chaos from the massive snowstorm hitting the East Coast, a number of international flights bound for New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport, which closed in the morning, were diverted to Washington's Dulles International Airport, CBS News correspondent Kris Van Cleave reports. (New York's other airport, LaGuardia, was also closed.)

In New Jersey, Newark Liberty International Airport was the airport most affected by the storm. More than 930 flights, or 71 percent of the airport's traffic, were canceled.

For Friday, more than 310 flights in the U.S. have already been canceled.

3:01 p.m.: Boston mayor holding storm press conference
Boston Mayor Marty Walsh is holding a press conference on the snowstorm. You can watch it in the player above.

1:55 p.m.: New York governor holding storm press conference
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo is holding a press conference on the snowstorm. You can watch it in the player above.

1:45 p.m.: Flooding hits coastal town outside Boston
Seawater with chunks of ice has flooded an area outside Boston.

Kathryn Burcham, a reporter with WFXT-TV, posted a video to Twitter showing flooding in Winthrop, which is just outside Massachusetts' capital.

Buoys bobbed on top of the floodwaters, which came up to the wheel wells of a fire truck.


1 p.m.: Storm shelves Panthers-Bruins hockey game
The Boston Bruins home game against the Florida Panthers has been postponed because of the snowstorm battering New England.

The Boston area could get as much as 18 inches of snow as well as high winds that could lead to power outages from the Thursday storm.


The National Hockey League hasn't announced the date and time of the rescheduled game. Tickets for Thursday's game will be valid for the makeup game.

The Bruins are in second place in the Atlantic Division after going 16-3-2 in their last 21 games. The Panthers had won five consecutive games before losing Tuesday in Minnesota.


12:12 p.m.: North Carolina reports third snowstorm death
North Carolina authorities say a driver slid off a road in snowy conditions and overturned his vehicle, marking the state's third fatality attributed to a snowstorm sweeping the region.

State Emergency Management spokesman Keith Acree says the man died in Beaufort County around 2 a.m. Thursday.

The man's vehicle slid off the road into a ditch and overturned. Acree says the area had a lot of snow, and authorities determined it was a weather-related death.

Acree identified the man as 29-year-old Joshua Wayne Biddle of Washington, North Carolina.

The Highway Patrol had earlier reported that two men died in a weather-related crash in Moore County on Wednesday night.

CBS News has confirmed that at least 13 people nationwide have died from the blast of winter weather and accompanying cold temperatures.

11:38 a.m.: New York mayor holding storm press conference
New York Mayor Bill de Blasio is expected to hold a press conference on the snowstorm soon. You can watch it in the player above.

11:19 a.m.: Flights suspended at New York's JFK Airport
Flights have been temporarily suspended at New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport, the airport said on Twitter.

The airport said it was experiencing whiteout conditions and strong winds.

Travelers were urged to contact their carriers.


10:47 a.m.: North Carolina deaths blamed on storm
Two deaths in North Carolina are being blamed on the East Coast snowstorm.

Authorities say two men died during the winter storm Wednesday night when their pickup truck overturned into a creek.

A spokesman for the state Highway Patrol says the truck came to rest on its top while submerged in the creek in Moore County, which is southwest of the Raleigh-Durham area.

Sgt. Michael Baker identified those killed as the driver, 57-year-old Michael Alexander Wilson, and a passenger, 73-year-old Jerry David Wilson. Both were from Bear Creek.

Both men died at the scene.

CBS News has confirmed that at least 13 people have died from the blast of winter weather and accompanying cold temperatures.

10:35 a.m.: Residents of coastal town urged to evacuate
Blizzard conditions are expected on the coast of New England, and residents are bracing for possible flooding and power outages as a result, CBS Boston reports.

A blizzard warning has been issued from Cape Cod in Massachusetts to the Maine coast through 1 a.m. Friday.

The town of Scituate, Massachusetts, is urging residents along the coastline to voluntarily evacuate. Officials are concerned that the ocean will flip large chunks of ice over seawalls and into homes as the storm intensifies.

Many spent Wednesday boarding up windows, and crews did last-minute checks on the seawalls. The town has raised the height of most of them.


9:25 a.m.: Trooper hangs from helicopter to rescue man from icy river
A Massachusetts State Police trooper hanging out of a helicopter as it skimmed the frigid Merrimack River was able to pluck a man from the water in a last-ditch rescue effort.

A state police spokesman tells the Boston Globe the helicopter was on scene in Lowell Wednesday night to provide illumination via spotlight. But when efforts to reach the man by boat were foiled by ice and rocks, the flight crew decided to attempt a rescue themselves.


9:14 a.m.: Virginia deploys hundreds of workers to clear roads
The Virginia Department of Transportation has more than 1,500 workers working 12-hour shifts with more than 1,400 pieces of equipment in response to the storm, CBS News correspondent Omar Villafranca reports from Norfolk.

High winds are a major concern in the state. Bridges are at higher risk of freezing, and the Chesapeake area has over 90 of them. All of them have been sprayed with brine to keep them from becoming sheets of ice.

In Norfolk, the city is under a blizzard warning for only the second time since the 1980s.

All schools, city offices, libraries and courts are closed. Public transit isn't running.


8:48 a.m.: Snowfall could reach 18 inches in New England
Snow that could pile as high as 18 inches in some spots of New England has begun falling.

A light snow started falling in Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts and New Hampshire just before dawn Thursday.

Snow is expected to increase after sunrise and peak during the late morning through the afternoon. Rain over Cape Cod and the Islands is likely to change over to snow in the afternoon.

The storm is not just bringing snow but high winds with gusts as high as 75 mph in some spots, which could bring down power lines and cause power outages.

There also is a risk of coastal flooding.

Schools across the region are closed for the day, and governors are urging people to stay off the roads.


7:25 a.m.: Toll on air travel
Airlines canceled 2,944 flights Thursday out of 27,224 scheduled to, from and within the U.S., according to flight-tracking website FlightAware.com. Most impacted was Newark Liberty International Airport in New Jersey, which has 856 flights canceled (68 percent of those scheduled) and 9 flights delayed more than 15 minutes.

Carriers have already scrapped 154 flights scheduled for Friday in the U.S.


5:27 a.m.: Power outages spreading
Some 77,000 homes and businesses reported losing electricity late Wednesday and early Thursday in Virginia, Georgia, South Carolina and Florida. Most were attributed to the storm.

4:03 a.m.: Brrrr: Baby, it's gonna get cold(er) outside
The lead meteorologist at CBS West Palm Beach, Florida affiliate WPEC-TV, Jeff Berardelli, says the storm will go down as one of the strongest non tropical cyclones ever along the Eastern Seaboard. Barometric pressure is forecast to drop near or below that of Superstorm Sandy. While 12-18-plus inches of snow on Long Island and eastern New England will be impressive, the cold behind the system will be even more impressive. Friday and Saturday morning will see the mercury at or below zero from New York City north, with wind chills of minus-20 degrees near New York City and minus-50 in the mountains of northern New England.

3:45 a.m.: Conditions worsening in Washington, D.C. area

2:30 a.m.: Amtrak train partially derails
Three cars of an Amtrak train heading from Miami to New York with 311 passengers on board derailed as the train tried to slowly back into the Savannah, Georgia station late Wednesday night, Amtrak tells CBS News. All three cars -- a baggage car and two sleeper cars -- stayed fully upright. There were no reports of injuries.

CBS Savannah affiliate WTOC-TV says frozen switches on the tracks forced the crew to stop the train and put it into reverse.

News footage from the site showed police and other emergency vehicles -- their lights flashing -- crunching over snowy, ice-shrouded roads near tracks where the cars had derailed. Workers in neon safety vests, their frosty breath rising in the bitter cold air, converged at the scene.

The train was expected to continue north, with some of the sleeping car passengers being transferred to a different train.

12:13 a.m.: Storm passing over southeastern Virginia, northern North Carolina
Snow is tracking across Virginia's Hampton Roads area and northern North Carolina, reported CBS affiliate WTKR-TV meteorologist Madeline Evans. Portions of the Outer Banks were only spot still seeing a mix of cold rain and some snow, and it will continue to transition into only snow overnight.

Most of the area will see 8 inches to 10 inches of snow accumulation, with some spots possibly reaching a foot of snow, according to Evans.

Snowfall will increase northward into portions of the Mid-Atlantic and northern New England early Thursday, according to the National Weather Service. Blizzard conditions are possible over eastern Long Island and portions of coastal New England, and also near the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay and Hampton Roads.

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan signed an executive order declaring a state of emergency for the shore areas, CBS Baltimore reports.

Wednesday, Jan. 3
10 p.m.: Philadelphia officials announce snow emergency

Philadelphia city officials announced that a snow emergency goes into effect at 12:01 a.m. ET on Thu., Jan. 4.

Managing Director Michael DiBerardinis says a snow emergency means all parked cars must be moved off snow emergency routes for plowing. Officials urge residents to park as far away from street corners as possible so that plows can easily turn.

For more information, visit this website. Cars left on snow emergency routes will be moved to other parking spots to assist in snow plowing operations. If your car is moved, call 215-686-SNOW to find it. Do NOT call 911.

9:45 p.m.: Nearly 35,000 people without power in the South
CBS News has confirmed that nearly 35,000 people in the South are without power as a winter storm crosses the region.

A look at websites monitoring outages show that Georgia is hit hardest with at least 17,000 customers affected.

However, many of the outages predate the storm.


8:37 p.m.: American Airlines cancels more than 600 flights Jan. 4
American Airlines announced that more than 300 flights were canceled for Wednesday and more than 640 flights have already been canceled for Thursday.

All depatures are canceled from Boston and Providence's airports, American Airlines said. There are scattered cancellations from Philadelphia, Washington D.C. and New York's airports.

7:50 p.m.: New York City cancels school
New York City is under a winter storm watch from late Wednesday through Thursday evening, CBS New York reports. A blizzard warning has been issued for Long Island's Suffolk County and some coastal New Jersey counties, but New York City is not affected.


How much snow the city gets depends on the track of the storm. CBS New York forecaster Lonnie Quinn reported the North American Model expects the storm to track closer to the west, bringing 8.8 inches of accumulation.

But the European Model, which tracks the storm 54 miles farther east, anticipates only 2.9 inches of accumulation for New York City.

Wind gusts of 35 mph to 45 mph are also possible.

New York City's Department of Sanitation issued a snow alert starting at 6 p.m. Wednesday, meaning snow equipment will be ready to handle the winter weather.

7:05 p.m.: Deep freeze expected overnight in Florida
There will be a hard freeze overnight for many locations away from the immediate coast, CBS affiliate WJAX reports. Even the beaches will see a light freeze overnight.

Highs will be in the mid to upper 40s Thursday and another hard freeze is expected Friday morning.

In Tallahassee, the Suwannee County Sheriff's Office Division of Emergency Management will be opening as a warming station for people to escape the cold, CBS affiliate WCTV reports.



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