A travel ban for the New York area was lifted on Sunday
but Washington was still at a standstill after a blizzard paralyzed the
northeastern United States, killing at least 19 people.
The storm
was the second-biggest in New York history, with 26.8 inches (68 cm) of snow in
Central Park by midnight on Saturday, just shy of the record 26.9 inches set in
2006, the National Weather Service said.
Thirteen people were killed
in weather-related car crashes in Arkansas, North Carolina, Kentucky, Ohio,
Tennessee and Virginia on Saturday. One person died in Maryland and three in
New York while
shoveling snow. Two died of hypothermia in
Virginia, officials said.
By early on
Sunday the storm had moved off the coast, with remnants trailing over parts of
Long Island and Cape Cod. Much of the northeast was expected to see a mix of
sun and clouds on Sunday with temperatures just above freezing.
Washington
streets were deserted early on Sunday, with major downtown arteries already
cleared and lined with mounds of snow. Workers were clearing sidewalks and
alleys, and Mayor Muriel Bowser issued a call for 4,000 people to help dig the
city out, above the 2,000 volunteers already signed up.
The
Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, which includes the
second-busiest U.S. subway system, had suspended operations through Sunday.
New YorkGovernor Andrew Cuomo lifted a travel ban on New York-area roads and on Long
Island at 7 a.m. on Sunday. A state of emergency imposed by Cuomo was still in
place.
Bridges and
tunnels into the city also reopened, and subways running above ground were set
to restart service Sunday morning. The Long Island Rail Road was still halted,
and the Metro-North railroad would be fully operational by mid-afternoon,
officials said.
The National
Weather Service said 17.8 inches (45.2 cm) fell in Washington, tying as the
fourth-largest snowfall in the city's history. Baltimore-Washington
International Airport notched a record 29.2 inches (74.2 cm), and the deepest
total was 42 inches (106.7 cm) fell at Glengarry, West Virginia.
SHOWS,
FLIGHTS CANCELED
A
spokeswoman for the New York Stock Exchange said the bourse planned to open as
usual on Monday.
About 3,750 flights were canceled on Sunday, and 700
canceled for Monday, according FlightAware.com, the aviation data and tracking
website.
Flights had begun landing at John F. Kennedy InternationalAirport and would soon start taking off from the facility, Cuomo said in a news
conference.
United Airlines said it would not operate at
Washington-area airports on Sunday, and would gradually resume service on
Monday. The airline plans to start "very limited operations" on
Sunday afternoon at its Newark, New Jersey, hub.
About 150,000 customers in North Carolina and 90,000 in
New Jersey lost electricity during the storm.
On the New
Jersey shore, a region hard-hit in 2012 by Superstorm Sandy, the storm drove
flooding high tides.
They were expected to reach as much as 3 feet (91 cm) above normal
across the New Jersey coast, said Mitchell Gaines, a meteorologist with the
National Weather Service.
"There's considerable danger with the tide coming up,"
he said.
Some residents had to be evacuated along the New Jersey shore on
Saturday as waters rose. In the town of Wildwood, emergency workers in
inflatable boats rescued more than 100 people from homes, said Fire Chief
Christopher D’Amico.
On Sunday, moderate coastal flooding was still a concern in
Atlantic County but a change of wind direction would make the impact less
problematic than on Saturday, said Linda Gilmore, a county public information
officer.
The storm developed along the Gulf Coast when warm, moist air from
the Atlantic Ocean collided with cold air to form the massive winter system,
meteorologists said.

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