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Northeast Weather: New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania Experience Atypical April Weather

Posted: 04/22/2012 10:08 am

NEW YORK (AP) — A spring nor'easter along the East Coast on Sunday is expected to bring rain and heavy winds and even snow in some places as it strengthens into early Monday, a punctuation to a relatively dry stretch of weather for the Northeast.

The storm is atypical for April but not uncommon, said David Stark, a National Weather Service meteorologist in New York City, where 2½ to 3½ inches of rain are expected in the city with wind gusts of 25-30 mph.

Some higher-elevation areas in the western parts of Pennsylvania and New York could even see snow. Eight to 12 inches of snowfall were forecast for a few counties in western Pennsylvania and 3-4 inches in and around Pittsburgh.

Flooding was possible in some areas, but precipitation in much of the Northeast is running below normal for this time of year.

"We're down 7 or 8 inches," National Weather Service forecaster Charlie Foley said. "This won't completely wipe out the deficit but it will certainly help."

Even Lake Champlain on the Vermont-New York border, normally close to flood stage this time of year because of rain and snowmelt, is near a record low. Just a year ago, it approached its highest level on record.

The storm's biggest threat is likely power outages caused by falling trees and limbs bringing down power lines, said meteorologist John Darnley.

Another unseasonable nor'easter last year just before Halloween dumped up to 2 feet of wet, heavy snow that snapped tree limbs and power lines, and knocked out power to more than 3 million customers in the Northeast. In Connecticut, it broke a state record for the number of power company customers left in the dark by a single storm that had been set only two months earlier when the remnants of Hurricane Irene slammed the state as it barreled up the Eastern Seaboard.

The worst of the flooding from Irene was in Vermont and northern New York, where cleanups continue seven months later. Farmers are still grappling with crop-smothering rocks, trees, gravel and sand left behind when the flood waters receded. But the dry weather has eased the threat the debris that litters the landscape will rush downriver again.

Farther south, light rain was falling Sunday morning over the Baltimore and Washington metro areas and was expected to intensify throughout the day, said meteorologist Carrie Suffren, who warned drivers to beware of low visibility and slick roadways. She cautioned boaters on the Chesapeake Bay of the winds.

Elsewhere in the mid-Atlantic, parts of eastern Pennsylvania and northern New Jersey could see up to 4 inches of rain, with the heaviest downfall expected early Monday.

In Rockport, Mass., the approaching storm forced police to halt until Tuesday a search for a missing 2-year-old girl who apparently disappeared from a beach Thursday when her mother went to retrieve a lost ball. The beach is known for strong riptides.

FOLLOW GREEN

NEW YORK (AP) — A spring nor'easter rumbled along the East Coast on Sunday and was expected to bring rain and heavy winds and even snow in some places as it strengthens into early Monday, a punctuat...
NEW YORK (AP) — A spring nor'easter rumbled along the East Coast on Sunday and was expected to bring rain and heavy winds and even snow in some places as it strengthens into early Monday, a punctuat...
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dvdsn61
Sapienter si Sincere
11:53 AM on 04/23/2012
Unusual does by no means mean unprecedented. Google " the year without summer" In 1816 New England had snow and freezing temperatures in June. Over 1800 people either froze to death or starved to death that year because all the crops were ruined. Fossil fuels were not widely used in those days, so there must have been some other reason for such an unusual event.
11:49 AM on 04/23/2012
Could we be any more full of ourselves. The earth is about 4.1 billion years old. And we look at the past 100 years or so to reach conclusions about the earth's weather patterns. We can't concede that we don't know all that much. The only thing we get wrong more than the weather is our diets.
11:43 AM on 04/23/2012
Late April snows were more common when I was in school on the shores of Lake Ontario 50 plus years ago. Fortunately, foresight had caused a significant amount of electric lines to be underground, and these storms only were to whiten the landscape.
bouvdoggie
hopeful pessimist
10:46 AM on 04/23/2012
Not typical but not uncommon at the beginning and at the end they stopped looking for a child because of riptides and an approching storm or something equally nonsensical. The child went missing in Mass. but the report of an odd weather occurence was by a NYC National weather service person. They have only the very tenuous connection of a storm. The child should be in another news release, not stuck at the bottom of a weather report.
10:13 AM on 04/23/2012
We already have 6" of snow on the ground here in Buffalo!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dongflopper
Floppin for decades!
09:44 AM on 04/23/2012
I'm not going to say anything about Global warming because of all the ignorance out there. Except for this storm (not unheard of), the beaches losing an 1/8" of ground every year and the massive decline in Glaciers to show land that hasn't been seen in millions of years. Possible Polar bear extinction for lack of ice crossings and long drowning swims. Oh, I've gone and talked about it. You know six years ago we had a storm like this in April, and I swear set a record high of 87* six days later. Nothing odd going on!
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dvdsn61
Sapienter si Sincere
09:39 AM on 04/23/2012
Climate change is also unstoppable, You show me one climate change scientist that will deny that, and I'll show you a liar.
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09:31 AM on 04/23/2012
I hope they get buried and we don't hear anything from NY for a week or two
09:20 AM on 04/23/2012
No mention of temperature? Is it colder than usual?
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Ryan Tippens
republican.
09:28 AM on 04/23/2012
yeah,its snowing like mad up north.
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dvdsn61
Sapienter si Sincere
08:53 AM on 04/23/2012
I don't question the reality of climate change. Climate change has been happening in cycles for millions of years. What I do question is the motives that some would use climate change to their advantage in their political agendas.
01:08 PM on 04/23/2012
Are humans speeding up the inevitable, maybe but it is inevitable that planet earth will keep changing as it always has.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Canefighter
I post my thoughts on subjects, not opinions.
08:51 AM on 04/23/2012
Here in North Carolina we are still waiting for Winter to hit.
08:17 AM on 04/23/2012
Ever hear of April showers bring May Flowers. Get real. So we had a rain storm in April. Goodness what is next? Maybe the Sun will come out.
"A-Typical sunshine hits NorthEast"
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buckeye3118
Less Government, More Freedom
07:47 AM on 04/23/2012
Where's Al Gore's 'Global Warming' science (fiction) when we need it?
07:03 AM on 04/23/2012
I remember when they made the movie Soylent Green. I thought, at that time, that it was a bunch of Hollywood HOOEY.
It's coming TRUE ! !
ENJOY.
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bsmith8874
05:49 AM on 04/23/2012
I blame California