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Northeastern Recovers
from Back-to-Back Blizzards
By Meredith Buel
February 12, 2010
Battered residents in
the northeastern United States struggled Thursday to recover from
back-to-back blizzards that blanketed the region and led to record
levels of snowfall in some cities, including Washington D.C.
The federal government was closed for the fourth straight day in
Washington and the capital city joined other major metropolitan areas
recording their largest total winter snowfalls in history.
The National Weather Service says more than 53 centimeters of new snow
fell on Washington during the latest storm.
The region was already buried in up to 90 centimeters of snow from a
storm less than a week earlier.
Schools and many businesses in the area remain closed, while hundreds of
airline flights were cancelled.
Limited air travel resumed Thursday at airports in Washington,
Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York.
Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell called out the National Guard to help
people dig out from the storms in hard hit areas outside Washington.
"Most of the major interstates [highways] now are in reasonably good
shape. We are working through the primaries (roads). We have got
additional National Guard that I deployed up there on Saturday, about
500 people and about 40 trucks to help get into some of those
neighborhoods for emergency operations," he said.
The blizzards affected tens of millions of people from Virginia up the
East Coast to Massachusetts.
The storms were accompanied by wind gusts of up to nearly 90 kilometers
per hour.
"There is some melting. They can see some blacktop so they might think
that it is safe. But there is still black [difficult to see] ice out
here and it is still treacherous," said Tom Flint, a private contractor
who is helping plow streets in Northern Virginia.
Washington and the surrounding states of Maryland and Virginia have
requested help from the federal government to pay for the massive
cleanup.
Washington
Mayor Adrian Fenty called in extra equipment to help residents remove
enormous amounts of snow. "Backhoes, tractors, everything, we have got a
lot coming in so neighbors are going to see that out in their
residential streets. We are going to help them dig out because there is
just so much snow," he said.
Residents, like this man who lives on Capitol Hill in central
Washington, are hoping life will return to normal soon. "It is wonderful
just to be able to dig things out, get to work and try and get life back
under control," the resident said.
As the day progressed in Washington, temperatures hovered around the
freezing mark, but bright sunshine began to melt the snow and improve
driving conditions on roads in many suburban communities such as Silver
Spring, Maryland. "They are pretty good. They are passable. Most of the
lanes of major streets are down to the pavement. They are a little wet,
but most all of the lanes are clear," he said.
As exhausted residents longed for a respite from the winter weather,
forecasters warned of the possibility of another snow storm on the East
Coast early next week. |