Return Home Members Area Experts Area The best AskMe alternative!Answerway.com - You Have Questions? We have Answers! Answerway Information Contact Us Online Help
 Sunday 19th May 2024 07:07:24 PM


 

Username:

Password:

or
Join Now!

 

Home/Government/Politics

Forum Ask A Question   Question Board   FAQs Search
Return to Question Board

Question Details Asked By Asked On
I'm this has something to do with... Itsdb 02/08/07
    global warming.

    Upstate New York towns buried under 6 feet of snow

      20 deaths now blamed on slick roads, cold
      Associated Press

      While the northern Plains and Northeast shiver in dangerously cold temperatures, the folks in upstate New York are keeping warm shoveling snow – lots of snow.

      Since Sunday, the small towns of Parish and Mexico have recorded more than 6 feet of snow, and forecasters with the National Weather Service say it isn’t over yet.

      Another 2 feet or more of heavy lake effect snow was expected Thursday for the communities along eastern Lake Ontario, and more squalls are likely through the weekend.

      “We’re just trying to keep up. It’s almost an unreal amount,” said Mayor Randy Bateman of Oswego, where 70 inches of snow had fallen by Thursday morning. “We catch up when it stops, but then it just comes again, even heavier.”

      Whiteout conditions – the snow has been falling at a rate of 5 inches an hour at times – forced state police to temporarily close Interstate 81 between Central Square and Pulaski, a stretch of about 15 miles.

      Travel advisories against unnecessary travel were posted for Oswego and its neighboring counties. Mexico officials renewed a snow emergency declaration, and many government offices were closed.

      Schools were closed for a fourth day in Oswego and Mexico.

      In West Virginia, where as much as 9 inches of snow has fallen, some schools that had been closed were able to reopen on Thursday, but in most of the state, classes were still delayed, and in a few counties, canceled. Officials had to call snowplow drivers out of retirement Wednesday to clear the roads.

      The weather also disrupted travelers, leaving some stranded overnight in airports in the Midwest after flights to the Northeast were disrupted.

      Temperatures in the Northeast were inching back up to something closer to normal for this time of year, but the upper Midwest and northern Plains still awoke to subzero temperatures Thursday – minus-12 in Minneapolis and 3 below zero in Chicago.

      The bitter cold and slippery roads have contributed to at least 20 deaths – five in Ohio, four in Illinois, four in Indiana, two in Kentucky, two in Michigan, and one each in Wisconsin, New York and Maryland, authorities said. Three of them died Tuesday when two SUVs crashed on a slick road in Kosciusko County, Ind. An autopsy Wednesday determined that an elderly woman found in a New York City building had died of hypothermia.

      In Oswego, a big concern was keeping the city’s 800 fire hydrants clear, said Fire Chief Ed Geers.

      “We’re just trying to keep on top of digging out the hydrants. When you get 5 feet of snow in 24 hours, it’s tough,” Geers said.


    I take it that six feet of snow is not normal in upstate NY.

Summary of Answers Received Answered On Answered By Average Rating
1. NO it is rare if it happens at all. For global warming Arizo...
02/08/07 tropicalstormExcellent or Above Average Answer
2. not all at once ...but it is not unusual for the Buffalo are...
02/09/07 tomder55Excellent or Above Average Answer
3. The last time they got that sort of snowfall was back in the...
02/09/07 ETWolverineExcellent or Above Average Answer
4. According to the Globals, ANY weather is a sign of warming: ...
02/09/07 drgadeExcellent or Above Average Answer
Your Options
    Additional Options are only visible when you login! !

viewq   © Copyright 2002-2008 Answerway.org. All rights reserved. User Guidelines. Expert Guidelines.
Privacy Policy. Terms of Use.   Make Us Your Homepage
. Bookmark Answerway.