Perilous
Times
Nine dead, 3 million without power after freak US snowstorm
* by: By Michael Melia
* From: AP
* October 31, 2011 10:12AM
A FREAK October snowstorm has knocked out power to more than 3.2
million homes and businesses across the US northeast, with close
to 60 centimetres of snow falling in some areas over the weekend.
The storm was blamed for at least nine deaths, and states of
emergency were declared in New Jersey, Connecticut, Massachusetts
and parts of New York.
The storm was even more damaging because leaves still on the trees
caught more of the particularly wet and heavy snow, overloading
branches that snapped and wreaked havoc.
"You just have absolute tree carnage with this heavy snow just
straining the branches," National Weather Service spokesman Chris
Vaccaro said today.
From Maryland to Maine, officials said it would take days to
restore electricity, even though the snow ended today.
The storm smashed record snowfall totals for October and worsened
as it moved north. Communities in western Massachusetts were among
the hardest hit. Snowfall totals topped 68cm in Plainfield, and
nearby Windsor had gotten 66cm by early Sunday (local time).
Roads, rails and airline flights were knocked out, and passengers
on a JetBlue flight were stuck on a plane in Hartford,
Connecticut, for more than seven hours on Saturday.
More than 800,000 power customers were without electricity in
Connecticut alone - shattering the record set in August by
Hurricane Irene. Massachusetts had more than 600,000 outages, and
so did New Jersey. Parts of Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, New York,
Maine, Maryland and Vermont also were without power.
"It's going to be a more difficult situation than we experienced
in Irene," Connecticut Governor Dannel P Malloy said. "We are
expecting extensive and long-term power outages."
Thirty-two shelters were open around the state, and Malloy asked
volunteer fire departments to allow people in for warmth and
showers. At least four hospitals were relying on generators for
power.
Many of the areas hit by the storm had also been hit by Irene. In
New Jersey's Hamilton Township, Tom Jacobsen also recalled heavy
spring flooding and a particularly heavy winter before that.
"I'm starting to think we really ticked off Mother Nature somehow,
because we've been getting spanked by her for about a year now,"
he said while grabbing some coffee at a convenience store.
Mr Vaccaro, the weather service spokesman, said the snowstorm
"absolutely crushed previous records that in some cases dated back
more than 100 years." Saturday was only the fourth snowy October
day in New York's Central Park since record-keeping began 135
years ago.
There usually isn't enough cold air in the region to support a
snowstorm this time of year, but an area of high pressure over
southeastern Canada funnelled cold air south into the US, Mr
Vaccaro said. That cold air combined with moisture coming from the
North Carolina coast to produce the unseasonable weather.
The storm did less damage in coastal areas than it would have in
winter because warm ocean temperatures limited snowfall, Mr
Vaccaro said.
A few businesses enjoyed the early snow: Ski resorts in Vermont
and Maine opened early. But it was more commonly an aggravation.
Many residents were urged to avoid travel altogether. Speed limits
were reduced on bridges between New Jersey and Pennsylvania. A few
roads closed because of accidents and downed trees and power
lines, said Sean Brown, a spokesman for the Pennsylvania
Department of Transportation.
The JetBlue passengers stranded at Hartford's Bradley
International Airport were on a flight from Fort Lauderdale,
Florida, to Newark, New Jersey, that had been diverted. Passenger
Andrew Carter, a football reporter for the Sun Sentinel in Fort
Lauderdale, said the plane ran out of snacks and bottled water,
and the toilets backed up.
JetBlue spokeswoman Victoria Lucia said power outages at the
airport has made it difficult to get passengers off the plane, and
added that the passengers would be reimbursed.
In 2007, passengers in JetBlue planes were stranded for nearly 11
hours at New York's Kennedy Airport following snow and ice storms.
There were other flight delays in the region over the weekend, and
commuter trains in Connecticut and New York were delayed or
suspended because of downed trees and signal problems. Amtrak
suspended passenger train service on several Northeast routes, and
one train from Chicago to Boston got stuck overnight in Palmer,
Massachusetts. The 48 passengers had food and heat, a spokeswoman
said, and they were taken by bus Sunday to their destinations.
Three people died in Pennsylvania because of the storm. An
84-year-old Temple man was killed Saturday afternoon(local time)
when a snow-laden tree fell on his home while he was napping in
his recliner. In suburban Philadelphia, a 4WD spun out of control
on an icy freeway, crashed through a guardrail and plunged down an
embankment, killing two people early on Sunday (local time).
In Connecticut, the governor said one person died on Saturday in a
Colchester traffic accident that he blamed on slippery conditions.
In New York, a 54-year-old Long Island woman died on Sunday
morning after she lost control of her car on an icy road and
struck another vehicle.
Two New Jersey residents were killed in the storm. An elderly
Franklin Lakes man died late Saturday in a house fire sparked by a
downed power line. On the Hamburg Turnpike in Wayne, a Haledon man
died after his vehicle hit a parked utility truck hoisting a
worker inside a bucket who was mending power lines. The worker
suffered minor injuries.
And a 20-year-old man in Springfield, Massachusetts, stopped when
he saw police and firefighters examining downed wires and stepped
in the wrong place and was electrocuted, Captain William Collins
said.
The snow was a bone-chilling slush in New York City, and was a
taste of what's to come for demonstrators camping out at Zuccotti
Park in lower Manhattan for the Occupy Wall Street protest.
Worcester and other central Massachusetts towns are asking
residents to postpone their Halloween trick-or-treating while they
recover from the weekend's freak snowstorm.
Less than 10 miles from Worcester, the towns of Auburn and
Leicester have also asked parents to put off celebrating
Halloween, the Worcester Telegram & Gazette reported today.
"We need time to clean up and enjoy the trick or treating and all
of the festivities knowing that we will be safe," Worcester City
Manager Michael V. O'Brien said. "We don't want families and
children maneuvering around piles of snow and downed trees."