A winter storm made travel torturous in the
Northeast on Sunday, dropping a thick layer of snow that stranded
thousands of airline, train and bus passengers and made motorists
think twice about hitting after-Christmas sales.
More than a foot (30 centimeters) of snow was expected in some
areas, including New York and Boston, where an aquarium had to
protect - of all things - penguin ice sculptures from the elements.
A dumping of up to 20 inches (50 centimeters) had been forecast for
Philadelphia, where the Eagles-Vikings NFL game was postponed
because of the storm, but by early evening meteorologists said the
city would end up getting no more than a foot.
More than 1,400 flights had been canceled out of the New York
City area's three major airports alone, and more cancellations were
expected Monday.
Airlines canceled flights throughout the Northeast and at
airports in Washington, D.C., Baltimore, Chicago and the Carolinas.
They expected more cancellations Monday, but were trying to rebook
passengers and hoped to resume normal operations Tuesday.
U.S. Airways had already canceled 110 Monday flights by Sunday
afternoon - spokesman Jim Olson said that was to try to keep
passengers and crews from getting stranded at airports.
New York's Kennedy Airport was calm, apparently because many
would-be travelers elected not to trudge to the terminal in hopes of
getting rebooked.
Andrew Brent's flight to Florida was repeatedly pushed back, and
the New York mayoral spokesman thought he might have to wait until
Monday to meet up with his wife and son for vacation. But he added,
"I'll get down there eventually so I'm not terribly worried."
Amtrak, meanwhile, canceled train service from New York to Maine
on Sunday evening, after doing the same earlier for several trains
in Virginia. Bus companies canceled routes up and down the East
Coast, affecting thousands of travelers.
Kate Lindquist, on her way home from New Hampshire to New York
City, was greeted with a handwritten sign at a Boston bus station:
"Sorry, we are closed today."
"To have this happen on a Sunday during a holiday weekend is
incredibly frustrating," she told the AP in an e-mail.
The Northeast received the brunt of the storm. Forecasters issued
a blizzard warning for New York City for Sunday and Monday, with a
forecast of 11 inches (28 centimeters) to 16 inches (41 centimeters)
of snow and strong winds reducing visibility to near zero at times.
A blizzard warning was also in effect for Rhode Island and most
of eastern Massachusetts, where 12 inches (30 centimeters) to 16
inches (41 centimeters) of snow was expected by the time flurries
taper off Monday morning, said William Babcock, a meteorologist with
the National Weather Service in Taunton, Mass. A blizzard warning is
issued when snow is accompanied by sustained winds or gusts over 35
mph (56 kph).
Before any snow actually accumulated in the city, the
Philadelphia Eagles' game against the Minnesota Vikings was delayed
from Sunday night to Tuesday because of "public safety concerns."
Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell, who does football commentaries after
Eagles games, was not amused and said fans could have handled it.
"This is football; football's played in bad weather," Rendell
told KYW-TV. "I, for one, was looking forward to sitting in the
stands throughout the snow and seeing an old-time football game."
In Boston, the New England Aquarium bubble-wrapped its four
5-foot (1.5-meter) penguin ice sculptures to protect them from the
wind and snow.
The weather deterred some people from hitting day-after-Christmas
sales, but that appeared to be a relatively light blow for retailers
coming off a strong shopping season.
"People will just wait a day to do exchanges and use their gift
cards. It's no big deal," said Greg Maloney, CEO of the retail
practice of Jones Lang LaSalle, which manages malls across the
country.
The monster storm is the result of a low pressure system off the
North Carolina coast and strengthened as it moved northeast,
according to the National Weather Service.
Travel misery began a day earlier in parts of the South, which
was hit with a white Christmas for the record books.
Columbia, South Carolina, had its first significant Christmas
snow since weather records were first kept in 1887. Atlanta had just
over an inch (2.5 centimeters) of snow - the first measurable
accumulation on Christmas Day since the 1880s. About 12 inches (30
centimeters) of snow fell in Norfolk, Virginia, the most seen there
since a February 1989 storm dumped nearly 15 inches (38
centimeters).
Utility companies in the Carolinas said more than 100,000 people
lost power because of the storm, and only about a third had service
restored by midday Sunday.