Powerful storm hammers U.S. East with
heavy snow, wind gusts
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[January 24, 2017]
(Reuters) - A powerful storm that
killed at least 21 people in the southern United States over the weekend
was expected on Tuesday to bring heavy snow and wind gusts to the
Northeast, causing school closings, treacherous driving conditions and
power outages.
The storm, known as a nor'easter, was forecast to bring snowfalls of up
to 9 inches (23 cm) along with icy rains and wind gusts of 40 mph (65
kph) to northern Pennsylvania through central New York and into Maine on
Tuesday morning, the National Weather Service said.
"Only travel in an emergency," it said in an advisory.
School districts across the region canceled or delayed the start of
classes on Tuesday due to the icy road conditions. Local news outlets
showed early-morning footage of vehicles covered with a thick glaze of
ice and snow-covered roads.
"I didn't want a snow day but I didn't want to drive in this mess
either," Lauren Piechota, a teacher in Vermont, said on Twitter.
Flood advisories and watches were also in effect for coastal areas
throughout New England until midday as rain totals for the last couple
of days were expected to reach 3 inches (8 cm), the weather service
said.
About 15,000 customers were without power early on Tuesday morning,
according to online reports by utility companies in the region.
"Scattered power outages are expected as the slushy accumulations and
ice will weigh down trees and power lines," the weather service said.
The storm unleashed deadly twisters in Mississippi and Georgia over the
weekend before turning cooler as it advanced on the Northeast on Monday
and into Tuesday. It was expected to head into Canada by Wednesday, the
service said.
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A tractor trailer lies on its side after a tornado struck a
residential area on Sunday in Albany, Georgia. REUTERS/Tami Chappell
The weather system killed 16 people on Sunday in Georgia, according
to a tally by the Storm Prediction Center in Oklahoma.
Georgia Governor Nathan Deal extended a state emergency declaration
to 16 counties and said President Donald Trump had called him on
Sunday and promised he would be "ready and willing to respond" to an
expected request for federal disaster relief.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; Editing by Raissa
Kasolowsky)
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