

Miller said, adding that wind direction will play a big part in the effects on the coastline. is expected to be lower than the morning high tide, but it will be hard to tell the exact nature of the storm’s effects until daylight, Mr. Miller said the town had seen “worse tides than this before.” Miller said.Īlthough the weather kept him from checking on erosion caused by the flooding, Mr. “This morning we did have some very high tides with storm surge,” Mr.
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There was localized flooding next door in Brewster, according to Christopher Miller, director of the town’s Natural Resources Department. on Saturday:Ĭentral Park in New York City, 7.5 inchesīridgeport Municipal Airport in Connecticut, 10.4 inchesĪ parking lot at Sesuit Harbor in Dennis, Mass., was covered in water Saturday morning, according to a Facebook post from the Dennis Police Department. Several towns across the region have opened warming centers and the Chappaquiddick Ferry on the Vineyard had resumed service as of 6 p.m., according to the Edgartown Police Department.Īcross the Northeast, the Weather Service reported these as the highest snowfall totals as of 5 p.m. With the wind chill, temperatures were expected to fall below zero in some places, according to the Weather Service. The temperature had also begun to drop precipitously. there were still about 80,000 customers without power on Cape Cod and the islands of Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket, down from nearly 90,000 earlier in the day. The evening’s high tide was expected to be as much as a foot lower than the morning high tide, and winds had started to die down as well.Īt 8:30 p.m. The coastal flood warning that had been in place during the day has since been reduced to a coastal flood advisory, according to a statement from the Barnstable County Regional Emergency Planning Committee.

There had been no reports of major damage throughout the day, and the worst of the storm had already passed. would mean for the area’s beaches and coastal homes. Maine was expected to get an estimated 12 to 18 inches across the central and eastern parts of the state.Īs the fiercest effects of Saturday’s storm began to wane on Cape Cod, it remained unclear what the night’s high tide at around 8:30 p.m. Parts of Rhode Island and eastern Massachusetts had received almost two feet of snow. He added that the snow flurries over Long Island were “evaporating pretty fast” as well. New Hampshire was hardest hit, with the southern and central parts of the state picking up well over a foot in many places.Īnother snowstorm is expected to hit New England on Wednesday, bringing at least a few inches of snow to most of the state before a change over to rain.Areas like Cape Cod in Massachusetts, the coast of New Jersey and the state of Rhode Island, which were pelted with snow throughout the morning and afternoon, were not expected to receive any more snowfall through the night, Mr. The worst of the snow was north of Worcester and along Cape Ann. Most places around Greater Boston picked up a few inches, with about one inch on the ground at Boston's Logan Airport. On Mic: Jordan Rich Late Night ClassicsīOSTON ( WBZ NewsRadio ) - Most parts of Massachusetts are digging out from at least a few inches of snow after Monday's storm.Everyday Wealth with Soledad O’Brian and Jean Chatzky.Health News: Powered by Tufts Medical Center.
