Sunday, January 5, 2014

Midwest Snowstorm Brings Northeast Ice Threats

By , Senior Meteorologist
January 5,2014; 6:24PM,EST
 
 
While the worst of the weekend snowstorm took aim at the St. Louis to Detroit corridor, ice threatens to create problems for travelers across the Northeast and down to western North Carolina.
The track of the snowstorm will lead to a brief rebound in temperatures and some rain for the East Coast through Monday.
However, roads and sidewalks will still turn slippery for a time from western North Carolina to the Northeast from lingering cold and then the arctic blast in the storm's wake.
The icing concern encompasses the I-95 corridor, including Washington, D.C., Baltimore, Philadelphia and Harrisburg, Pa., New York City, Binghamton and Albany, N.Y., Boston, Burlington, Vt., and Portland, Maine.

With the ground still frozen from Friday's arctic blast, the rain and drizzle set to end the weekend spreading northward from the mid-Atlantic through New England will initially freeze on some surfaces.
Any icing near the coast will be brief, but the changeover to plain rain will take a little longer to occur across the interior.
RELATED:
Detroit, St. Louis Snowstorm Precedes Dangerous Cold
Northeast Interactive Radar
Current Map of Expected Snow Totals

A prolonged ice event is not expected, preventing widespread tree damage and power outages. There could be isolated issues, especially across northern New England where the pre-Christmas ice storm weakened trees and branches.
Even without a major ice event set to unfold, motorists and residents should not let their guard down. It only takes a little ice to cause untreated roads and sidewalks to turn slippery.

Also accompanying the rain and drizzle will be areas of travel-disrupting fog, especially where snow is covering the ground.
The threat for slick travel will not end with the changeover to plain rain.
A dramatic drop in temperatures in the wake of the storm's cold front will cause any wet spots on untreated roads and sidewalks to rapidly freeze in a west-to-east fashion from the Tennessee Valley to the Northeast Sunday through Monday night.

Some places will even see the rain end as a bit of snow as the arctic air arrives. The best opportunity for this snow to accumulate and even produce whiteouts will be in the Appalachians, not along the I-95 corridor.
Once the dangerously cold air settles over the Northeast, the main travel concerns will shift to places downwind of the Great Lakes as a major lake-effect snow event unfolds.

On Social Media
Aaron Marvin
amarvin
To all my Midwest and Northeast friends, we Oregonians face the snow and ice with you. Well, more like a bit of frost. <runs and hides> #fb
clare gajdo
claregajdo
Main St. West..snow/slush covered. Freezing rain/ice pellets falling pic.twitter.com/4XyCA2ioVp
 

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