The temperature outside dropped from the 70s to the 40s in a couple hours, as it should in October. But compared with what the East Coast is currently facing, I'm glad to be a Midwesterner.
WASHINGTON (AP) — An unusual nasty mix of a hurricane and a winter storm
that forecasters are now calling "Frankenstorm" is likely to blast most
of the East Coast next week, focusing the worst of its weather mayhem
around New York City and New Jersey.
Government forecasters on Thursday upped the odds of a major weather mess, now saying there's a 90 percent chance that the East will get steady gale-force winds, heavy rain, flooding and maybe snow starting Sunday and stretching past Halloween on Wednesday.
Meteorologists say it is likely to cause $1 billion in damage.
The storm is a combination of Hurricane Sandy, now in the Caribbean, an early winter storm
in the West, and a blast of arctic air from the North. They're
predicted to collide and park over the country's most populous coastal
corridor and reach as far inland as Ohio.
The
hurricane part of the storm is likely to come ashore somewhere in New
Jersey on Tuesday morning, said National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration forecaster Jim Cisco. But this is a storm that will affect a far wider area, so people all along the East have to be wary, Cisco said.
Coastal areas from Florida to Maine will feel some effects, mostly from the hurricane part, he said, and the other parts of the storm will reach inland from North Carolina northward.
Once
the hurricane part of the storm hits, "it will get broader. It won't be
as intense, but its effects will be spread over a very large area," the
National Hurricane Center's chief hurricane specialist, James Franklin, said Thursday.
One
of the more messy aspects of the expected storm is that it just won't
leave. The worst of it should peak early Tuesday, but it will stretch
into midweek, forecasters say. Weather may start clearing in the
mid-Atlantic the day after Halloween and Nov. 2 in the Northeast, Cisco said.
"It's almost a weeklong, five-day, six-day event," Cisco said Thursday from NOAA's northern storm forecast center in College Park, Md. "It's going to be a widespread serious storm."
With every hour, meteorologists are getting more confident that this storm is going to be bad and they're able to focus their forecasts more.
The New York area could see around 5 inches of rain during the storm, while there could be snow southwest of where it comes inland, Cisco said. That could mean snow in eastern Ohio, southwestern Pennsylvania, western Virginia, and the Shenandoah Mountains, he said.
Both private and federal meteorologists are calling this a storm that will likely go down in the history books.
"We don't have many modern precedents for what the models are suggesting," Cisco said.
It
is likely to hit during a full moon when tides are near their highest,
increasing coastal flooding potential, NOAA forecasts warn. And with
some trees still leafy and the potential for snow, power outages could
last to Election Day, some meteorologists fear.
Some
have compared it to the so-called Perfect Storm that struck off the
coast of New England in 1991, but Cisco said that one didn't hit as
populated an area and is not comparable to what the East Coast may be
facing. Nor is it like last year's Halloween storm, which was merely an
early snowstorm in the Northeast.
"The
Perfect Storm only did $200 million of damage and I'm thinking a
billion," said Jeff Masters, meteorology director of the private service
Weather Underground. "Yeah, it will be worse."
But
this is several days in advance, when weather forecasts are usually far
less accurate. The National Hurricane Center only predicts five days in
advance, and each long-range forecast moves Sandy's track closer to the
coast early next week. The latest has the storm just off central New
Jersey's shore at 8 a.m. on Tuesday.
As
forecasts became more focused Thursday, the chance of the storm
bypassing much of the coast and coming ashore in Maine faded, Cisco
said.
The hurricane center's Franklin called it "a big mess for an awful lot of people in the early part of next week."
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