A strong winter storm is slamming the Northeast with stiff winds and punishing cold, dumping nearly 60 centimetres of snow in parts of the region and threatening more.
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The National Weather Service said 53 centimetres of snow had fallen in Boxford, just north of Boston, by Thursday night, while other parts of the state had 43 or 45 centimetres.
It said parts of Upstate New York had 45 centimetres while New York City was expected to get about 20 centimetres. Just over 8 centimetres of snow had fallen in Central Park early Friday.
The brutal weather extended Christmas break for some students while posing the first test for New York's new mayor and perhaps the last challenge for Boston's outgoing one.
Some schools in New England and New York closed well ahead of the Thursday snowfall. Cities have mobilized plows and salt spreaders. Some major highways have been ordered shut down overnight. Efforts are underway to get homeless people into the warmth and safety of shelters.
Tough travels
U.S. airlines have cancelled more than 2,300 flights countrywide.
"It's been a tough road," said traveller Heather Krochuk, of Toronto, inside a Boston hotel Thursday night after her flight home out of Logan International Airport got cancelled in what's turned into a 36-hour trip from Seattle, where she spent Christmas with her husband, Ron.
But, she said, "we have a place to sleep that isn't the airport."
The heavy weather began rolling in just a day after New York Mayor Bill de Blasio was sworn in to lead the country's largest city and a few days before Boston Mayor Thomas Menino ends 20 years in office.
Menino announced a parking ban and said schools would be closed Friday in Boston, where up to 35 centimetres of snow was expected.
"What a new year's gift, to receive one last snowstorm as mayor," said Menino, whose successor takes office on Monday.
De Blasio, who as public advocate in 2010 criticized his predecessor Mayor Michael Bloomberg for his handling of a post-Christmas storm, said hundreds of plows and salt spreaders would be on the streets as soon as the snow started falling Thursday night.
"We have to get it right, no question about it," de Blasio said. "We are focused like a laser on protecting this city and getting everyone ready. We have all hands on deck."
The National Weather Service issued a blizzard warning for Cape Cod, coastal areas north and south of Boston and part of Maine as well as New York's Long Island.
"We're going to see a lot of snow and a lot of wind," forecaster Jason Tuell said. "We're concerned about whiteout conditions possibly tonight with the blowing and drifting snow."
Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick said state offices that closed early Thursday would remain closed on Friday. He said National Guard members and state police were on standby for any high tide flooding overnight or Friday in vulnerable coastal areas, but no mandatory evacuations have been ordered.
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo ordered three major highways in his state, stretching from Long Island to Albany, to close overnight. He said the highways should reopen at 5 a.m. Friday.
Shelters open 24 hours
Outreach teams looked to get homeless people off the streets of New York City and Boston.
In Boston, staff members at the Pine Street Inn shelter were keeping it open 24 hours and said they would turn no one away, even if it meant setting up extra cots in lobbies and other common areas.
As the storm approached, a worker at a suburban Philadelphia salt storage facility was killed when a 30-metre-tall pile of road salt fell and crushed him. Falls Township police said the man was trapped while operating a backhoe. There was no word on what may have caused the accident.
Amtrak planned to run trains on all of its Northeast lines on Friday but operate on a modified schedule, spokeswoman Christina Leeds said.
In New York, Consolidated Edison utility spokesman Sidney Alvarez said the utility was expecting the snow to remain powdery rather than wet and heavy, "but with any type of snow, you're looking at extra weight on branches that can snap and bring power lines down."
Douglass Bibule shopped for rock salt and other supplies at a home improvement store in Watertown.
"Well, there will be some shovelling that I will have to do and some sanding," he said. "I've got to go home and do some stretching exercises to make sure I don't hurt myself while doing that, and do a little shopping to make sure that we have all the supplies that we need. We need food because we have three older children at home."
In Maine, the cold didn't deter Andrew Kosak from swinging by Gelato Fiasco in Brunswick to take advantage of a cold-weather promotion: The price of a gelato drops 1 per cent for every degree below freezing.
"It's never too cold for gelato," Kosak quipped after receiving a 36 per cent discount that reflected the -20 C temperature during an outing with his wife and two daughters.
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