Manhattan is a ghost town. The Boston Common is buried in white. The New England coastline is being whipped by near hurricane-force winds and waves.
Welcome to the blizzard of 2015.
“We’re hunkered down with food shelter and water,” said Rafi Menachem, a financial consultant who lives in Brookline, Massachusetts, near Boston. “I’m worried about electricity.”
Menachem’s wife is a doctor at Boston Medical Center. She’s sleeping at work and won’t be back home until Wednesday, maybe later.
Even weather-toughened New Englanders are paying attention to this storm. You almost have to when the National Weather Service is throwing out terms like “crippling” and “potentially historic” when talking about this storm.
It cleared the roads and let snow plows do their jobs.
THE FORECAST
Snow is falling 2 to 4 inches and hour at times and is especially heavy along the coast.
Up to 58 million people could be put into the deep freeze. And the storm could have a far-reaching economic and political impact, even beyond the region directly hit.
States of emergency are in place in seven states across the region — Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and New Hampshire.
THE IMPACT
Flying into and out of the Northeast is a non-starter.
More than 4,300 flights have been canceled for Tuesday, the flight-tracking website Flightaware.com said. That’s on top of 2,800 scrubbed on Monday. Hundreds more have already been canceled for Wednesday.
The hardest hit airports were in New York, Boston and Philadelphia. Boston’s Logan Airport won’t reopen until Wednesday.
The major U.S. airlines are offering fee-free rebooking of flights to and from the Northeast through Tuesday.
For some travelers, it was touch and go. Ricardo Canadinhas looked through an ice-coated window on his Virgin Atlantic flight before takeoff. He could barely see. “#isthissafe,” he tweeted.
Other Amtrak train routes in the region will operate at reduced frequencies, the rail line said.
THE ROADS
“It is no joke to have people stranded on a highway. We’ve gone through that before,” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo told reporters Monday. “It is frightening how quickly a simple trip to the supermarket can wind up being very dangerous.”
Connecticut and Massachusetts also put travel bans in place. Violating the ban can set you back $500 in Massachusetts.
In Philadelphia, Mayor Michael Nutter declared a snow emergency. Cars left parked on snow emergency routes will be towed and owners ticketed, he said.
“It’s going to be the kind of night where the best thing anybody can do is stay inside,” Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker said Monday evening.
THE REACTION
The storm warnings seemed to impress even the most-jaded Northeasterner.
Groceries flew off store shelves from Brooklyn to Bangor.
Michelle Thompson, a professor who lives in New York, found little left at a Greenwich Village grocery store.
“These are the sorts of supplies New Yorkers need,” she said gazing at the empty shelves. “Apparently, fresh bread is imperative as well eggs. Don’t forget the dried pasta and sauce!”
It was the same story at the Star Market Menachem shops at in Boston.
“A majority of the produce, deli, meats, eggs, milk and bread were all gone,” he said.
Manhattan is a ghost town. The Boston Common is buried in white. The New England coastline is being whipped by near hurricane-force winds and waves.
Welcome to the blizzard of 2015.
“We’re hunkered down with food shelter and water,” said Rafi Menachem, a financial consultant who lives in Brookline, Massachusetts, near Boston. “I’m worried about electricity.”
Menachem’s wife is a doctor at Boston Medical Center. She’s sleeping at work and won’t be back home until Wednesday, maybe later.
Even weather-toughened New Englanders are paying attention to this storm. You almost have to when the National Weather Service is throwing out terms like “crippling” and “potentially historic” when talking about this storm.
It cleared the roads and let snow plows do their jobs.
THE FORECAST
Snow is falling 2 to 4 inches and hour at times and is especially heavy along the coast.
Up to 58 million people could be put into the deep freeze. And the storm could have a far-reaching economic and political impact, even beyond the region directly hit.
States of emergency are in place in seven states across the region — Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and New Hampshire.
THE IMPACT
Flying into and out of the Northeast is a non-starter.
More than 4,300 flights have been canceled for Tuesday, the flight-tracking website Flightaware.com said. That’s on top of 2,800 scrubbed on Monday. Hundreds more have already been canceled for Wednesday.
The hardest hit airports were in New York, Boston and Philadelphia. Boston’s Logan Airport won’t reopen until Wednesday.
The major U.S. airlines are offering fee-free rebooking of flights to and from the Northeast through Tuesday.
For some travelers, it was touch and go. Ricardo Canadinhas looked through an ice-coated window on his Virgin Atlantic flight before takeoff. He could barely see. “#isthissafe,” he tweeted.
Other Amtrak train routes in the region will operate at reduced frequencies, the rail line said.
THE ROADS
“It is no joke to have people stranded on a highway. We’ve gone through that before,” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo told reporters Monday. “It is frightening how quickly a simple trip to the supermarket can wind up being very dangerous.”
Connecticut and Massachusetts also put travel bans in place. Violating the ban can set you back $500 in Massachusetts.
In Philadelphia, Mayor Michael Nutter declared a snow emergency. Cars left parked on snow emergency routes will be towed and owners ticketed, he said.
“It’s going to be the kind of night where the best thing anybody can do is stay inside,” Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker said Monday evening.
THE REACTION
The storm warnings seemed to impress even the most-jaded Northeasterner.
Groceries flew off store shelves from Brooklyn to Bangor.
Michelle Thompson, a professor who lives in New York, found little left at a Greenwich Village grocery store.
“These are the sorts of supplies New Yorkers need,” she said gazing at the empty shelves. “Apparently, fresh bread is imperative as well eggs. Don’t forget the dried pasta and sauce!”
It was the same story at the Star Market Menachem shops at in Boston.
“A majority of the produce, deli, meats, eggs, milk and bread were all gone,” he said.