Land of the freeze: arctic wave hits
northern United States
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[December 29, 2017]
By Gina Cherelus
NEW YORK (Reuters) - An arctic blast sent
most of the U.S. Northeast and Midwest into a deep freeze that set
record lows in several spots on Thursday as forecasters warned the
frigid temperatures could last through the New Year holiday.
A cold front bearing down on the Pacific Northwest was expected to dump
as much as 3 feet (1 m) of snow from Friday morning in parts of
Washington state and the northern Rocky Mountains, the National Weather
Service said.
The weather is set to test the mettle of hundreds of thousands in New
York's Times Square as they ring in the New Year on Sunday night.
Forecasters said the temperature is likely to dip under 10 degrees
Fahrenheit (minus 12 C), well below the typical average low for the day.
In Times Square, thousands were bundled up for a chill that hit the
city. "It's really cold but I love it. My fingers feel like they're
going to break but it's OK," said Tashena Eason, 28, a registered nurse
from Miami, Florida.
For a time, the hashtag #ItSoCold was the top trending U.S. topic on
Twitter on Thursday.
Meanwhile, Tioga, North Dakota, about 200 miles (320 km) north of
Bismarck, was one of the coldest spots in the continental United States
on Thursday at minus 15 F (minus 26 C) early on Thursday afternoon.
For most of the region encompassing New England, northern Pennsylvania
and New York, the National Weather Service issued wind chill advisories
or warnings as temperatures were expected to be below 10 degrees F in a
wide area.
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A woman takes a picture as she bundles up against the cold
temperature in Times Square in Manhattan, New York, U.S., December
28, 2017. REUTERS/Amr Alfiky
For upstate New York, east of Lake Ontario, the NWS warned of
"dangerously" cold wind chills of minus 5 F to minus 30 F through
Friday.
Erie, a city of about 100,000 on the shores of Lake Erie in northwest
Pennsylvania, was expecting a fresh round of winter storms that could
bring as much as an additional 10 inches (25 cm) of "lake effect" snow,
forecasters said. The area is already buried under more than 65 inches
from a record-breaking storm earlier this week.
At Erie's UPMC Hamot hospital – the only trauma center in the area –
employees used their own four-wheel-drive vehicles to ferry snowbound
workers to the hospital to ensure it could continue to operate. Some
employees stayed overnight to avoid getting stranded, Jim Donnelly, the
hospital's chief nursing officer, said on Thursday.
(Reporting by Gina Cherelus in New York; Additional reporting by Chris
Kenning in Chicago and Jon Herskovitz in Austin, Texas; Editing by
Matthew Lewis)
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