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Northeast digs out from deadly March snowstorm

By WILSON RING, Associated Press
Published: March 15, 2017, 9:54pm
2 Photos
Surrounded by neck-deep snow, Scott Young tries to dig out his van early Wednesday in a parking lot in Saranac Lake, N.Y. The area received up to 40 inches of snow in Tuesday's storm.
Surrounded by neck-deep snow, Scott Young tries to dig out his van early Wednesday in a parking lot in Saranac Lake, N.Y. The area received up to 40 inches of snow in Tuesday's storm. (lou reuter/Adirondack Daily Enterprise) Photo Gallery

MONTPELIER, Vt. — The Northeast was in dig-out mode Wednesday, a day after a treacherous storm packing strong winds and accompanying plummeting temperatures left some residents dealing with rock-hard ice and others with more than 2 feet of snow. The upshot: a late-season boost to the region’s ski areas.

The powerful nor’easter that paralyzed much of the Washington-to-Boston corridor Tuesday fell short of the predicted snowfall in many areas, but the 29.9 inches of snow that fell by Wednesday afternoon at the Burlington International Airport in Vermont was the second-most on record, about 3 inches shy of the high established in January 2010.

Many schools in New England remain closed or had delayed openings Wednesday, giving crews time to dig out from the storm, which followed a stretch of unusually mild winter weather.

In Albany, N.Y., streets were largely cleared Wednesday morning of the almost 2 feet of snow that fell a day earlier. But many cars were still buried under thick blankets of snow.

In Portland, Maine, most roads and sidewalks were cleared Wednesday, but firefighters were just getting to work digging out 1,500 hydrants.

Most people heeded warnings to stay off the roads, preventing the multicar pileups typically seen after a bad storm, but there were still deaths. A 16-year-old girl was killed when she lost control of her car on a snowy road and crashed into a tree in Gilford, N.H., police said. In East Hartford, Conn., an elderly man died after being struck by a snowplow truck. And, in Longmeadow, Mass., a public works employee was killed after the snowplow he was driving was hit by an Amtrak plow train clearing tracks.

The largest snowfall reported in Vermont was 34 inches in the town of Jay, about 50 miles northeast of Burlington, along the Canadian border.

National Weather Service Meteorologist Eric Evenson said that as of midnight Tuesday, the Burlington airport had received 60.6 inches of snow, still 8.8 inches below normal for the season but well ahead of the same point last year when only 29.9 inches had fallen.

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