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Monday, 11 February 2013

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US northeast digs out from deadly blizzard

US: The US northeast slowly dug out early Sunday from a mammoth blizzard that choked air, road and rail travel, left some 650,000 homes and businesses without power and caused at least seven deaths. The storm, which hit New York and other areas still scarred by Superstorm Sandy back in October, dumped as much as three feet of snow across New England, with hurricane-strength gusts helping to create massive drifts.

By late Saturday, the system had moved north to Canada, battering three provinces there.

New York area airports LaGuardia, John F. Kennedy and Newark, which halted all flights during the height of the storm Friday, resumed service with delays. However, FlightAware.com listed almost 2,000 cancellations around the region, on top of the 3,000 plus flights scrapped Friday.

The blizzard engulfing Boston’s Logan Airport was so severe that plowing operations were abandoned for several hours overnight. But authorities said arrivals would resume Saturday evening at some point, and departures on Sunday.

Amtrak said its rail link between New York and Boston would remain closed until Sunday, but trains were resuming normal schedules to Washington.

A driving ban in Massachusetts, where some two feet (0.6 meters) of snow fell in the blizzard and buried Boston streets, was lifted Saturday afternoon.

“We have a lot of snow to dispose of and to remove and it will take some time to do that. That is a necessary prerequisite to getting to power lines and getting power restored,” Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick said. Connecticut Governor Dannel Malloy lifted a similar ban but urged people to stay home anyway.

“It’s critical right now that residents stay off the roads, so that our plows can continue their efforts to clear our streets and highways,” Malloy said. “This is a record setting storm. It’s going to take time to dig out of the snow. Stalled or abandoned vehicles will only slow that process. Unless you face an emergency, please stay put.” The 31.9 inches (81 cm) that piled up in Portland, Maine, is the most recorded there from a single snowstorm, officials said.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) said FEMA liaisons have been positioned in state emergency operations centers in Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York (in Albany and New York City), Rhode Island, and Vermont. But in New York City, where just under a foot of snow accumulated in Central Park, most roads were cleared by morning. “Looks like we dodged a bullet,” Mayor Michael Bloomberg said. At midday the sun even came out, as people with sleds flocked to parks and took photographs. Organizers of New York Fashion Week welcomed the end of the white mess, on the third day of the shows.

AFP

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