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Rare snow blankets South as East braces for storm
#1
By JAY REEVES, Associated Press Writer
54 mins ago

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – A potent March snowstorm blanketed much of the Southeast with snow Sunday before barreling toward the Northeast, where officials prepared snowplows and road-salt for a wintery assault.

The icy blast threatened to drop up to a foot of snow in the Philadelphia area, 13 inches in New York and 15 inches across southern New England late Sunday.

Thousands of New York City sanitation workers prepared to salt city streets, and airlines preemptively canceled flights Sunday at the region's major airports.

The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation planned to attack the snow in the Philadelphia area with 400 trucks and 77,000 tons of stockpiled salt, assistant press secretary Gene Blaum said.

In Georgia, the snowfall rendered roads treacherous and delayed flights, while in Alabama, more than 210 churches in the central part of the Bible Belt state had to cancel morning services.

Vonda Braswell of Alabaster, Ala. was throwing snowballs in her front yard instead of putting on her Sunday best. "I think you can worship in this it's so rare," she said.

Up to 7 inches of snow was expected through Monday morning in areas of Maryland, northern Virginia and Washington, D.C., where Mayor Adrian Fenty declared a snow emergency.

In Virginia, nearly 10,000 customers of two power companies lost electric power Sunday night after the storm blew in.

Maryland has already spent more than $40 million responding to bad weather in what's been a colder-than-usual winter, Gov. Martin O'Malley said Sunday. Any money spent on digging out from the rare March storm will further burden a state that's facing a $2 billion budget shortfall.

"I don't like snow," O'Malley said.

In New York, Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced more than 1,300 sanitation workers stood ready to spread salt and plow streets.

"It's the first of March, which as you know is the month that we say comes in like a lion and out like a lamb," he said. "It's pretty clear that the lions are getting ready to roar."

As Wayne Letson drove through Alabama toward Florida on Sunday, the Michigan resident fretted about sharing the roads with Southerners unaccustomed to winter weather. The last time it snowed in Alabama was more than a year ago, in January 2008.

"This is nothing to me, but I'm worried about the other people who think they know what they're doing," he said.

Despite above-freezing temperatures in downtown Atlanta, a heavy curtain of snow fell on cars and caused traffic accidents on slushy streets. The unusual weather prompted Jessi Prahl and Max DiPace to take their dog, Cooper, on a walk through snow-covered Piedmont Park.

"You know us Southerners, we all freak out when it snows," said Prahl, 26.

Some flights were canceled at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, where the average delay was nearly two hours, according to the Federal Aviation Administration Web site.

AirTran Airways spokesman Tad Hutcheson said flights out of Atlanta into the Northeast might also be canceled Sunday night.

"I expect the Northeast will be hit pretty hard tonight so our expectations is that people flying into Washington, D.C., and Boston will need to call or check our Web site for possible cancellations," Hutcheson told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Georgia transportation officials warned of potential icy buildup on roads in middle and northern counties through Monday morning, especially as temperatures plummet overnight.

The late Southern snowfall revived memories of a large storm in 1993 that forecasters nicknamed the "Snowfall of the Century," which spanned a region from Alabama to north of Washington, D.C., said Laura Griffith of the National Weather Service. In that storm, Atlanta received 4.2 inches of snow and 13 inches fell on Birmingham, Ala.

Outside the CNN Center in downtown Atlanta, Flori Kwon of Claremont, Calif., took pictures of her son Jake, 5, cavorting in the snow.

"He wants to make a snowman but I don't think there's enough," Kwon said while large snowflakes landed in her hair. "We're kind of surprised it's snowing."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090302/ap_o...nter_storm
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#2
What a mess.  I got up at 4am and looked out the door and said forget it, I'm not going to work.  We had several hours of ice falling, last night.  Thank god electric is still on.  What a huge, late season nor'easter this storm is.
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#3
It sounds like the east coast is experiencing what Michigan usually experiences. DT has been loving it because her girls are on the east coast. She’s been laughing at them because the weather is usually nice out there. We got lucky and the snow storm missed us. All we got was the bitter cold. icon_cold


Northeast pounded by snowy late-winter storm

By DEEPTI HAJELA, Associated Press Writer
16 mins ago

NEW YORK – A massive late winter snowstorm pummeled the Northeast on Monday, grounding hundreds of flights, causing spinouts on highways, delaying trains and buses and closing school for over a million children from South Carolina to Maine.

The same storm hammered the Southeast on Sunday as it made its way north, blanketing Civil War statues and canceling hundreds of church services around the region.

By Monday, the storm was dumping snow on Maine, and most areas in the storm's wake expected to see at least 8 to 12 inches of accumulation.

The blizzard-like snow — together with sleet, freezing rain and wind gusts of up to 30 mph — contributed to four deaths on roads in Massachusetts, Rhode Island and on New York's Long Island.

An accident caused a 15-mile-long traffic jam in North Carolina, where as much as a foot of snow fell, and prompted police and rescuers to go car-to-car Monday to check on the stranded motorists.

The storm was blamed for 350 crashes in New Jersey between Sunday night and Monday morning, state police Sgt. Stephen Jones said. Most were spinouts and cars hitting guardrails, he said.

On New York's Long Island, high winds caused 2-foot snow drifts on highways in the town of Southampton.

In New York City, about 7 inches of snow was recorded at Central Park by Monday morning.

New Yorkers expressed characteristic resilience, struggling to get to work and appointments, and patching together child care arrangements.

Diane Lugo, 29, of Yonkers, had to leave her two children with her mother-in-law rather than drive them to day care. She got a ride with her husband to avoid trudging 10 minutes in the slush to her bus stop.

"Getting out of the driveway was pure hell," Lugo said in Manhattan, where she works as a college admissions coordinator.

Outside the Sound Shore Medical Center in New Rochelle, N.Y., Emilia Rescigna struggled to push a stroller through the snow and slush. In the stroller, asleep under a plastic tent, was her 1-year-old son Adam, who had a 9 a.m. appointment with his pediatrician.

"I called the doctor's office last night and this morning, to see if the appointment was still on, but no one was in," said Rescigna, a Bronx resident. "After all this they better not tell me I have to come back."

At the three major airports serving New York City, more than 900 flights were canceled — a majority of all flights at Kennedy, Newark and LaGuardia, according to the Port Authority. Most flights in and out of Boston's Logan International Airport were scrubbed, and the airport shut down for about 40 minutes to clear a runway. Philadelphia International Airport spokeswoman Phyllis VanIstendahl said about 44 people were stranded there overnight.

Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport remained open Monday, although a number of flights were canceled or delayed. Spokesman Jonathan Dean didn't have numbers on cancellations.

In downtown Boston, pedestrians negotiated slushy sidewalks and streets ankle-deep in snow as cars struggled past.

Anderson Francois, 27, of Boston, was waiting for a bus and said he prepared for the snow by doubling up on socks and wearing pajama pants under his jeans.

"You've still got to go where you got to go," said Francois. "I'm always ready for stuff like this."

But Dave Richardson, 30, of Salem, didn't think the storm was such a big deal.

"This is New England, after all."

More than 10 inches of snow was on the ground in southern New Jersey by 7 a.m. Monday, while South Carolina was dealing with 8 inches. Delaware had up to 9 inches by late Monday morning.

Greyhound and Peter Pan bus lines canceled trips affecting travelers in and out of New York, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, New Jersey and Washington, D.C.

Schools from North Carolina to Maine gave children a snow day. Public schools in Philadelphia and Boston did the same. In New York City, 1.1 million public school students got a snow day; the last time that happened was Jan. 28, 2004.

In Fairfax, Va., Sarah Conforti, 8, said Monday's day off was just what she'd been hoping for, and planned to "make a snowman or play in the snow with my friends," she said.

Her mother, Noelle Conforti, said Sarah and her 10-year-old sister couldn't be happier about the school-free day.

"The kids are against the window, just looking out the window like a cat," she said. "It's hilarious."

Commuter trains in Boston and New York had some delays during the morning rush. Transportation officials in the Philadelphia area said the rush hour wasn't bad considering the slippery conditions.

Amy Ledger, 30, was among many who braved the snow to attend the annual Philadelphia Flower Show, an indoor exhibition that provided a fragrant, spring-like respite from the blustery snow and wind.

Ledger and two friends took the train in from Lancaster, where they said there was only about an inch of snow on the ground early Monday morning. It got progressively snowier on the hour-long ride east.

"At one point, we couldn't even see out the train window," said Ledger, of Bethlehem. "It was really coming down."

Once at the show, winter seemed to melt away as the trio wandered past yellow daffodils, crimson azaleas and white tulips.

"I'm ready for spring," said Mindy Schlott, 29, of Ephrata, Pa.

In New Hampshire, where snow was falling at up to an inch per hour, Transportation Department spokesman Bill Boynton said plow crews were having trouble keeping up.

In Maryland, strong winds were complicating cleanup efforts as gusts were blowing just-plowed snow right back onto roads, said Lora Rakowski, a spokeswoman with the State Highway Administration.

In Virginia, about 120,000 customers were without electricity, including tens of thousands in the Richmond metropolitan area. In North Carolina, more than 100,000 customers were without power early Monday. In South Carolina, there were nearly 80,000 outages.

Thousands more were without power in southern Maryland, the Washington, D.C.-area, and central Jersey.

"I thought it was over," New Yorker Clarissa Arroyo said of the winter weather. "But it's not."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090302/ap_o...nter_storm
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#4
Yes I did laugh! My Peanuts who moved to Virginia, was stunned when she woke up to about 8 inches of the white stuff. She said that no one there even owns shovels. They haven't had snow there for many years. My daughter and her husband are lucky that they came from NJ and at least they had some stuff for snow. LOL
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