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Old 09-02-13, 13:33   #1
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Update US: The Storm Moves In, The Lights Go Out

Updated 7:27 AM EST, Sat February 9, 2013

People Walking As The Storm Hits.


1 dead, 650,000 without power as the snowstorm recedes:

Boston (CNN) -- A massive blizzard that dumped more than two feet of snow in parts of the Northeast is heading out to sea, averting the worst fears of New Englanders. The snowstorm has left one man dead in its wake and taken electricity from over 650,000 customers in the Northeast.

And it dumped about two feet of snow across New England and Long Island, the National Weather Service said in a bulletin early Saturday.

Connecticut saw the most accumulation with over 20 inches in many places, the NWS said, but the nor'easter has beaten up Massachusetts with winds howling at 60 to 75 mph. It knocked out power to over 400,000 addresses there, accounting for nearly two thirds of all power outages, according to the state's power companies.

Electricity dropped out at a nuclear power plant in Plymouth, Massachusetts, said fire spokesman Ed Bradley, but backup generators sprang into action. It's not an emergency, he said. Plymouth is 90% in the dark.

Rhode Island may have seen the worst outages relative to its size, with over 180,000 customers losing power. At one million residents, it has only one sixth of Massachusetts' population, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Snow covers the area from eastern Pennsylvania to Maine, the NWS said. It has turned most everything in sight white. Overnight lows hovered in most of the Northeast under 20 degrees and should not get above freezing Saturday. Governors of at least six states have declared states of emergency. At its height, the storm heaped snow on Connecticut at a frenzied rate of four to five inches an hour.

But the nor'easter is showing some mercy. Instead of carrying its destructive power further inland, the way superstorm Sandy did in early November, the nor'easter has begun taking its fury off shore, CNN Meteorologist Chad Myers said. But the system continues to sling snow back toward land, as it heads out over the Atlantic.
By mid morning Saturday, the precipitation will have slowed to a flurry, Myers said. The worst of the snow should cease before sunup, but winds will continue to push up dangerous drifts.

The nation's attention will likely then shift to the Plains and Mountain States, where blizzards and heavy snows are expected to last into Monday over a region larger than the Northeast but far less populous.

Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island, ahead of the storm ordered motorists to stay off the streets under threat of imprisonment and fines -- up to a year in jail and $500 in Rhode Island.

Connecticut officially closed all roads in the state Saturday morning with the exception of emergency vehicles capable of snow travel, said governor's office spokesman Andrew Doba.

Emergency and snow clearing vehicles are the only exceptions. Massachusetts' travel ban will last until at least 4 p.m. Saturday and not officially be over until the state's governor lifts it, according to emergency management spokesman Peter Judge.

Still, the only known loss of life from the storm so far occurred in a vehicle accident in New York. An 18-year-old woman lost control of her car due to the falling snow and struck a 74-year-old man walking near the side of the road, police in Poughkeepsie said. He died in hospital from his injuries.

Hundreds of cars were stranded on the Long Island Expressway, after motorists got stuck driving in the snow. They outnumbered the tow trucks and crews deployed in the area for the storm, according to the Suffolk County police.

Rescuers have recovered many, taking them to warm places, but still have their work cut out, police said. Rail transportation has come to a virtual halt, with commuter trains running on a patchwork schedule. Nearly 5,000 flights have been canceled to and from the Northeast Friday and Saturday.

Cities in the most populous section of the country looked like ghost towns, as streets usually bustling with traffic emptied out. Residents followed the pleas by governors and mayors to "basically, stay at home," as Boston Mayor Thomas Menino had advised.
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