New York – The first days of spring in parts of the Northeast will look a lot like the last weeks of winter.
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The National Weather Service says a powerful storm packing heavy, wet snow and strong winds could dump up to 18 inches of snow in some locations on Wednesday, the fourth nor’easter to smack the region in three weeks.
The National Weather Service says New York City and its northern suburbs could get 12 to 16 inches of snow; Philadelphia could get slightly more. Coastal flood warnings are posted for shore communities.
The weather service said Tuesday that a winter storm warning will take effect at midnight and continue through 8 a.m. Thursday.
The storm will start out as “mixed precipitation” and transition to heavy snow.
On Long Island, accumulations could reach 11 to 15 inches in Nassau County and 7 to 10 inches in Suffolk County.
Sleet and freezing rain are expected by Tuesday afternoon, the first day of spring. The mixed precipitation should turn to all snow by late Tuesday and continue through most of Wednesday.
Widespread power outages are possible, especially Wednesday, with gusts blowing up to 35 mph (56 kph).
The jet stream, the upper level river of air that guides weather, is stuck in a plunging pattern that brings plenty of moisture from the south up the East Coast, said Brian Hurley, senior forecaster at the National Weather Service’s Weather Prediction Center.
Four nor’easters in three weeks is highly unusual, but it happens when a pattern locks in. And that’s happened, Hurley said.
Officials are cautioning against unnecessary travel Wednesday afternoon and evening, when snow could be falling as much as 4 inches per hour. It’s also not yet clear where the heaviest snow bands may develop.
global warming anyone? blizzard in spring.
Good old global warming
Most important. Cancel alternate sides parking restrictions.