Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
NEW YORK (PIX11) – Some schools in New York and New Jersey closed or delayed opening Friday due to snow. Some parts of New Jersey could see up to 6 inches of snow. Crews treated the roads before ...
When New York City officials got wind of the major winter storm headed their way, they rewound the clock four years, reopened their coronavirus pandemic playbook, and announced that instead of ...
Providence County, Rhode Island, was the hardest hit by the blizzard; the towns of Lincoln, Smithfield, Woonsocket, and North Smithfield all reported totals of at least 40 inches (100 cm) snow. [3] In New York City, it was one of the rare times that a snowstorm closed the schools; the New York City Board of Education closed schools for snow ...
Schools, too, were impacted, with several districts in New York and Connecticut announcing they were closed or had a delayed start due to the potentially dangerous travel conditions.
[32] [33] Schools were closed on January 16 in Jersey City, New Jersey. [34] In Western New York, lake effect snow led to 3 fatalities, with snow totals in Copenhagen, New York being 40 in (100 cm) in just 27 hours and 15 minutes. [35] The lake effect snow prompted a Buffalo Sabres game against the Chicago Blackhawks to be postponed. [36]
New York City's Central Park officially recorded 20.2 inches (51 cm) for its fourth-largest single snowfall (records going back to 1869), but many locations in the other boroughs and suburbs recorded over 30 inches (76 cm) of snow. Schools in New York City's boroughs closed because of snow for the first time since the Blizzard of 1978, 18 years ...
Snowfall rates of up to 2 inches an hour were occurring across the Lower Hudson Valley, the New York City Emergency Management said on X. Storm blankets US Northeast in snow, closing schools and ...
New York City experienced its 5th largest snowstorm on record, 4th at the time. [21] This, combined with a winter storm earlier in the month resulted in February 2010 becoming the snowiest month on record in New York City. [22] Several private schools and institutions cancelled classes on Friday, February 26, due to the storm.