The National Weather Service described the storm as "potentially
crippling" for a swath of the Northeast, with snowfall exceeding two
feet (61 cm) in the Baltimore and Washington D.C. metro areas.
A blizzard watch was issued for New York City and parts of Long
Island and New Jersey starting early Saturday. Snow accumulation
could reach 12 inches (30 cm) in the region, forecasters said.
Southeastern Pennsylvania, including Philadelphia, was expecting 10
to 16 inches (25 to 42 cm) of snow.
To the south, significant icing was likely for portions of Kentucky
and North Carolina, the National Weather Service said.
Millions of residents in the storm's path scrambled to prepare for
the weekend weather event, picking stores clean of bottled water,
food and other supplies.
Federal employees in the Washington area were told their offices
would close at noon on Friday to allow them to get home safely
before the snow begins piling up in the afternoon. Public schools
were canceled. The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, which includes
the second-busiest U.S. subway system, took the rare step of
suspending operations from late on Friday through Sunday.
The Virginia National Guard said it planned to bring in up to 300
troops to assist in response operations.
Airlines have also canceled Friday and Saturday flights, with many
of the 2,200 cancellations for Friday, most of them at airports in
North Carolina and Washington, according to FlightAware.com.
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Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser and New York Mayor Bill de Blasio
urged motorists to stay off roads starting on Friday amid icy and
whiteout conditions.
The storm also forced many to amend weekend activities, with
Washington residents planning mass sledding events and a large
snowball fight on Sunday. New York canceled its Winter Jam in
Central Park, a winter sports festival set for Saturday, in
anticipation of the storm's arrival.
AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Alex Sosnowski said the storm
taking aim at Washington could rank among the biggest snowfalls on
record, eclipsing the "Snowmageddon" storm of 2010 that dropped 17.8
inches (45.2).
The largest snowstorm in recorded history in Washington was the 1922
Knickerbocker storm, which buried the city under 28 inches (71 cm).
(Reporting by Victoria Cavaliere in Los Angeles; Editing by Toby
Chopra)
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