AI Mobile snapshot

date 2026-02-23 id 8f5e5454-e0b5-4c7a-a09a-f5c7e8ee3929 updated 2026-02-23T17:13:18Z

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    "what_is_it": "\u201cNortheast Storm Knocks Out Power, Cancels Flights\r\nMore than 500,000 homes and businesses across the Northeast are without power and over 10,000 flights have been canceled since Sunday as a powerful storm rips up the US East Coast.\r\nManhattan\u2019s Central Park saw its 10th snowiest day on record, with more than 15 inches (38 centimeters) falling from Sunday through 7 a.m. local time Monday. The all-time record is 27.3 inches in January 2016. More than 22 inches fell in Islip on Long Island, according to the National Weather Service.\u00a0\r\nThe nor\u2019easter will continue in New York \u2014 where schools, roads and bridges are closed \u2014 through Monday afternoon before tapering off, with up to 8 inches more before it stops, the National Weather Service said.\r\n\u201cIt is a strong storm, there is no doubt about that,\u201d said Bob Oravec, a senior branch forecaster at the US Weather Prediction Center. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t happen every day, it doesn\u2019t happen every year either. It is definitely going to get better tomorrow.\u201d\r\nThe storm has snarled transportation across the Northeast and the US, as flight cancellations pile up and access to New York has been cut off. US natural gas futures jumped as much as 6.8%, with the colder weather set to boost demand for heating.\r\nWhile not universally recognized by the weather service or other outlets, the storm has been dubbed Hernando by the Weather Channel.\u00a0\r\nNew York Governor Kathy Hochul declared a state of emergency for New York City, Long Island and parts of the Hudson Valley. Massachusetts and New Jersey also declared an emergency and Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont banned commercial vehicle travel starting at 5 p.m. on Sunday.\r\nAs of 8:55 a.m. New York time, 10,377 flights around the US had been canceled from Sunday to Tuesday, with the majority of them in New York, Boston and Philadelphia, according to FlightAware, an airline tracking service. Many regional airports have been closed, including Long Island MacArthur Airport in Islip, according to the Federal Aviation Administration.\r\nIn addition, more than 500,000 homes and businesses from Virginia to Massachusetts are without power, PowerOutage.com said. Massachusetts was the hardest hit with 212,699 followed by New Jersey with 128,211. In New York City, 5,943 were blacked out in Queens and another 7,160 in Suffolk county.\r\n\u201cBlizzard conditions are expected and will make travel treacherous and potentially life-threatening,\u201d the New York branch of the US National Weather Service said in a notice late Sunday.\r\nThe heaviest snow and most dangerous winds were tearing across Long Island into Rhode Island and southeastern Massachusetts, said Rob Carolan, owner of Hometown Forecast Services, which provides outlooks for Bloomberg Radio. There were reports of 47 mile-per-hour gusts at John F. Kennedy International Airport, and as high as 70 mph on the Massachusetts islands of Nantucket and Martha\u2019s Vineyard.\r\nThe storm\u2019s central pressure dropped to 968 millibars Monday morning, down from 1,005 Sunday, Carolan said. \u201cSo it certainly bombed out,\u201d he added.\r\nAfter the storm passes through, some of the snow should start melting as temperatures rise above freezing, Oravec said. However, there is the potential for additional snow later this week. The computer forecast models aren\u2019t clear on the details yet.\r\nOn top of that, further out into next week there is also the chance another storm may sweep the Northeast, Carolan said. \u201cI don\u2019t see this breaking down until April.\u201d\r\n\u2014 With assistance from Lauren Rosenthal, Joe Wertz, Mary Hui, Hayley Warren and Alex Newman.\r\nThe latest in climate science and sustainable living.\u2028Get Bloomberg's Green Daily newsletter.\u201d",
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