Snow began to fall across New York and neighboring states on Dec. 26, and it was unlikely to stop anytime soon.
“Cold air damming is providing the right ingredients for observed freezing rain across the northern Mid-Atlantic, while areas from northern Pennsylvania to southern Connecticut will see heavy snowfall. Difficult travel conditions are ongoing for the area and those traveling back from the holiday should exercise caution if you have to be on the road.”
Winter storm warnings and winter weather advisories were put into effect for most of New York State, as well as most of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts, and parts of Maryland and Vermont.
Light snow was expected to start around 3 p.m., and the heaviest snowfall—as much as one to two inches per hour—was expected at night between 6 p.m. and 2 a.m. Sleet and freezing rain were also anticipated in some parts of southern New Jersey, and western Long Island. Afterward, light snow was expected to stick around the morning of Dec. 27, but then taper off by midday.
New York and New Jersey declared states of emergency Friday afternoon ahead of the winter storm.
The NWS warned that the intense snowfall could decrease visibility, and cause isolated downed tree branches and even power outages.
The “worst case scenario” showed New York City receiving 10 inches of snow, with nearby Newark, New Jersey, and JFK International Airport receiving as much as nine inches of snow.
This would be the biggest snowfall the Big Apple has experienced since it recorded four inches in 2022.
More than 1,600 flights were cancelled and nearly 8,300 flights were delayed into and out of the United States on Friday as weather conditions began to worsen, according to the flight-tracking service FlightAware.
Meanwhile, the greater lower Hudson Valley, Southern Connecticut, and the hills of New England were expected to receive seven to 11 inches of snow, with the possibility of 12 inches. Higher elevations were expected to receive higher amounts.
In Connecticut, NWS forecasted Bridgeport and New Haven to receive more than nine inches of snow, with 11 inches being the worst-case scenario. Danbury was expected to get 10 inches, or at most 12 inches.







