January 2016 United States blizzard explained

January 2016 United States blizzard
Type:Extratropical cyclone
Nor'easter
Winter storm
Ice storm
Blizzard
Tornado outbreak
Rsi:20.14
Lowest Pressure:983
Tornadoes:6 on January 21
Fujitascale:EF2
Tornado Duration:2 hours, 42 minutes
Sustained Wind:57mph at Assateague Island, Maryland
Gusts:74
Maximum Snow:Snow – 42inches on Glengary, West Virginia
Ice – At least 0.75inches in western North Carolina
Power Outages:631,000+ people affected
Total Fatalities:55
Damages:$500 million – $3 billion in economic losses
Affected:Pacific Northwest, Great Plains, South Central United States, Eastern United States (especially the Mid-Atlantic states), Atlantic Canada, British Isles, Finland
Enhanced:yes
Partof:the 2015–16 North American winter
Hail:2.75inches in diameter in Wilmer, Louisiana

The January 2016 United States blizzard produced up to 3feet of snow in parts of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeastern United States during January 22–24, 2016. A weather system, evolving from a shortwave trough that formed in the Pacific Northwest on January 19, consolidated into a defined low-pressure area on January 21 over Texas. Meteorologists indicated that a resultant storm could produce more than 2feet of snow across a wide swath of the Mid-Atlantic region and could "paralyze the eastern third of the nation", and regarded it as a "potentially historic blizzard".[1] [2] Winter weather expert Paul Kocin described the blizzard as "kind of a top-10 snowstorm".[3]

On January 20–22, the governors of eleven states and the mayor of Washington, D.C., declared a state of emergency in anticipation of significant snowfall and blizzard conditions. Approximately 103 million people were affected by the storm, with 33 million people placed under blizzard warnings. More than 13,000 flights were cancelled in relation to the storm, with effects rippling internationally. Thousands of National Guardsmen were placed on standby, and states deployed millions of gallons of brine and thousands of tons of road salt to lessen the storm's effect on roadways. A travel ban was instituted for New York City and Newark, New Jersey, for January 23–24. The storm was given various unofficial names, including Winter Storm Jonas, Blizzard of 2016, and Snowzilla.

Seven states observed snowfall in excess of 30inches, with accumulations peaking at 42inches in Glengary, West Virginia. Ice- and snow-covered roads led to hundreds of incidents across the affected region, several of which resulted in deaths and injuries. At least 55 people were killed in storm-related incidents: twelve in Virginia; nine in Pennsylvania; six each in New Jersey, New York, and North Carolina; four in South Carolina; three each in Maryland and Washington, D.C.; and one each in Arkansas, Delaware, Georgia, Kentucky, Massachusetts, and Ohio. Total economic losses are estimated between $500 million and $3 billion. The storm ranked as a Category 5 "extreme" event for the Northeast on the Regional Snowfall Index, and a Category 4 event for the Southeast.[4] [5] It is the most recent winter storm to rank as a Category 5 winter storm, and the first to do so since the 2011 Groundhog Day blizzard.

Preceding storm

A relatively minor storm ahead of the blizzard, similar to an Alberta clipper, caught numerous drivers off-guard, producing a brief period of heavy snow during rush hour in the Mid-Atlantic region on January 20.[6] Although only 1inches of snow fell in Washington, D.C., roadways were not treated; any snow that melted on roads quickly froze into black ice, rendering them impassable. Some referred to the event as "Carmageddon 2.0". Portions of Interstate 95 and Interstate 495 in Virginia and Maryland (especially on the Woodrow Wilson Bridge), as well as Interstate 270, were brought to a standstill through the early hours of January 21.[7] Virginia State Police responded to 767 accidents and 392 reports of disabled vehicles. The Virginia Department of Transportation mobilized 115 salt trucks to clear roads.[7] A man was killed after being struck by a snow plow in Beltsville, Maryland. Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser issued an apology for inadequate preparations in the wake of the storm on January 22. Vehicles in Maryland became stranded, with some residents abandoning their cars altogether.[8]

Georgia Governor Nathan Deal issued a state of emergency for northern counties on January 19, ensuring areas were better prepared than during a similar storm in 2014.[9] Icy conditions prompted road closures in northern Georgia, including portions of Interstate 75; several crashes resulted from the dangerous conditions.[10] Similar conditions affected Tennessee and Kentucky; schools closed on account of dangerous roads.[11] One person died and another was injured in an accident in Knox County after speeding on slippery roads.[12] Two deaths resulted from snow-related car accidents in North Carolina.[6] Another person died, and two others were injured, when a car collided with a salt truck in Whitley County, Kentucky.[13]

Meteorological history

The development of the winter storm was anticipated by forecasters for at least a week.[14] It originated in a shortwave trough—a weather disturbance in the upper atmosphere—that came ashore at the Pacific Northwest on January 19.[15] The trough strengthened as it moved southeastward through the Great Plains,[16] and on January 21 it spawned a weak low-pressure area over central Texas.[17] The incipient storm system began to intensify as it tracked eastward through the Gulf Coast states, triggering a line of strong to severe thunderstorms and multiple tornado warnings.[18]

During the mid-afternoon hours of January 22, a new low-pressure area began to develop over the coast of the Carolinas, as the former storm tracked into central Georgia. Owing to uncertainty in short-range guidance but a high confidence of a sharp northern edge of precipitation, many forecasts were predicting 12inches of snow or less until just hours before snowfall began, from Allentown, Pennsylvania, toward New York City and the southern coast of New England. As the storm moved further north and rapidly strengthened, it became apparent that snowfall would be much higher farther north, and forecasters quickly began upgrading their totals.[19] Early on January 24, as the storm was leaving New England, the system began to become elongated, as a secondary low developed to the southwest of the storm's central low.[20] On January 25, the blizzard left the East Coast of the United States; on the same day, the system was named Karin by the University of Berlin.[21]

Accompanied by a strong jet stream in the Atlantic, the remnants of the storm crossed the British Isles on January 26. The wind and rain associated with the low was forecast to have the potential to cause disruption in the United Kingdom,[22] and indeed there were areas that saw severe weather.[23] During the next few days, the system accelerated towards the northeast. On January 29, the storm system was absorbed by Windstorm Leone, over Finland.[24]

Preparations

Multiple offices of the National Weather Service issued various watches and warnings across the storm's projected path. Blizzard warnings covered coastal Connecticut; most of Delaware; most of Maryland; Massachusetts, particularly Martha's Vineyard; most of New Jersey; New York, including New York City; Pennsylvania; Rhode Island, especially Block Island; Virginia; and Washington, D.C.[25] Winter storm warnings were issued from Arkansas to Massachusetts, including parts of Connecticut, northern Georgia, extreme southern Illinois, extreme southern Indiana, the entirety of Kentucky, extreme northeastern Louisiana, southeastern Massachusetts, northeastern Mississippi, extreme southeastern Missouri, extreme southern New York, most of North Carolina, southern Ohio, southern Rhode Island, northern South Carolina, most of Tennessee, most of Virginia, and all of West Virginia.[26] [27] Freezing rain advisories covered parts of North and South Carolina.[28] Further winter weather advisories covered additional portions of the country, including eastern Kansas, southeastern Missouri, and northern Alabama.[29] Offshore, storm warnings covered areas from Georgia to Maine.[30] [31]

On January 21–22, the governors of Delaware,[32] Georgia,[33] Kentucky,[34] Maryland, New York,[35] New Jersey,[36] North Carolina,[37] Virginia, Pennsylvania,[38] Tennessee,[39] West Virginia,[40] and the mayor of Washington, D.C., declared a state of emergency in anticipation of significant snowfall and blizzard conditions.

Airlines cancelled more than 1,000 flights, with hundreds more preemptively grounded, by the afternoon of January 21 for January 22–24. Ripple effect cancellations spread across the entire East Coast.[41] By the afternoon of January 23, more than 10,100 flights were cancelled across the country, affecting well over 100,000 travelers.[42] Nearly 2,000 more flights were delayed.[43] Most airports in the Mid-Atlantic region suspended service altogether, with Baltimore–Washington International, Philadelphia International Airport, Ronald Reagan Washington National, and Washington Dulles International closed through the evening of January 24.[44] Flights to and from LaGuardia, John F. Kennedy International, and Newark Liberty International were largely cancelled as well. American Airlines suspended all flights departing from Charlotte-Douglas International Airport, causing a ripple of flights being cancelled throughout the country. Effects rippled internationally, with more than 100 flights in Canada, Mexico, and the United Kingdom cancelled.[45] [46] [47] Altogether, 13,046 flights were cancelled between January 22 and 26. Amtrak suspended service for many lines, including the service from New York City to New Orleans; the to Chicago; and the to Miami.[48]

Multiple sporting events, including those held by the Atlantic Coast Conference, National Basketball Association, and the National Hockey League, were postponed by the storm, while the National Football League's Arizona Cardinals vs. Carolina Panthers NFC Championship went on as planned for January 24 in Charlotte.[49] [50]

Mid-Atlantic

A snow emergency was declared for Washington, D.C., meaning that residents would not be allowed to park on snow emergency routes after 9:30 p.m. local time on January 22. Mayor Bowser urged people to remain home during the storm, "[u]nless you absolutely have to be out tomorrow afternoon [January 22], residents should get home as soon as possible".[51] Across Maryland, 2,700 pieces of snow equipment were mobilized and crews planned to distribute 365,000 tons of road salt. In Virginia, 500 vehicles were deployed to treat roads and 500 members of the Virginia National Guard were placed on standby.[52] Schools across the D.C. area were scheduled to end classes early on January 22, before the storm's arrival.[53] Stores across Maryland, Virginia, and Washington, D.C., reported a substantial uptick in sales, with groceries, heaters, shovels, and similar items sold out in numerous locations.[54] West Virginia Governor Earl Ray Tomblin mobilized the state's National Guard on January 21.[55] The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA) announced on January 21 that it would shut down its entire mass transit system over the weekend of January 22 and 23, including the Washington Metro and Metrobus, making it the longest such shutdown in the agency's history.[56] [57] On January 25, the WMATA operated limited Metro bus service, as well as rail service only on the underground portions of the Red, Green, and Orange Lines; however, fares were not charged.[58] In Richmond, Virginia, all flights out of Richmond International Airport on January 23 were cancelled,[59] and the Greater Richmond Transit Company (GTRC) bus system took the rare step of suspending all routes on January 24.[60] The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation had 2,200 vehicles and more than 733,000 tons of road salt on standby for use. Trucks deployed brine across major roads in and around Philadelphia, though residents were advised to avoid travel unless necessary. A travel ban was declared for Lancaster, Lebanon, Newberry Township, and York on January 23.[61] [62] SEPTA issued a near complete shutdown of its services, shutting down all bus services and closing all rail except for the Broad Street Line and Market–Frankford Line subways.[63]

New York City mayor Bill de Blasio declared a hazardous travel advisory for the city, encouraging people not to travel; however, he did not ban traveling.[64] On January 22, he declared a "winter weather emergency" and told residents to "Get done what you have to get done today ... Do not bring your vehicle out tomorrow". Taking place a year after a storm prompted the closure of the city's subway system in January 2015, only to largely bypass the city, Governor Andrew Cuomo stated that services would remain running. Approximately 1,800 workers equipped with 800 heaters were to keep rails clear for use.[35] Thousands of sanitation workers, 1,700 plows, and 150,000 tons of road salt were on standby to clear city roads.[35] He also put 600 members of the New York National Guard on standby. More than 50 power workers from Vermont were dispatched to Long Island to help restore power outages.[65] Around noon on January 23, owing to a significant increase in expected snowfall, Cuomo issued a travel ban for all roads in New York City and Long Island. The New York City Transit Authority suspended bus service; rail service on the Long Island Rail Road, Metro-North, and Staten Island Railway; and elevated subway service (with underground subway lines remaining open until further notice). In the meantime, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey closed bridges and tunnels in the region.[66] The New Jersey Transit was also shut down in preparation of the blizzard.[67]

A travel ban was instituted for Newark, New Jersey, on January 23 through the afternoon of January 24 in light of hundreds of snow-related accidents.[68]

Strong winds coupled with prolonged onshore flow resulted in a major coastal flood threat for Delaware and New Jersey. Near-shore waves were forecast to reach 15to with a storm surge of 3to.[2] In New Jersey, a mandatory evacuation was ordered for residents in coastal Barnegat Township in anticipation of significant coastal flooding; several other towns were placed under voluntary evacuation orders.[69]

Delaware Governor Jack Markell declared a "level 1 driving warning", encouraging people not to travel and indicating drivers should be extra cautious. The Delaware Department of Transportation had 330 snow plows ready to clear roads, though many areas were expected to be impassible on January 23. Shelters were also opened for the homeless.[32] In New Castle County and Kent County in Delaware the Department of Transportation and Governor Jack Markell declared a Level 2 driving restriction (essential personnel on the roads only.)[70]

Southeast

Anticipating a damaging ice storm, approximately 4,500 linemen were placed on standby to repair downed power lines in North Carolina; 1,000 state transportation workers also prepared for heavy snowfall, with crews placed on 12-hour shifts to be deployed as needed.[37] Crews from across the country arrived to assist North Carolina power companies.[44] Two million gallons of brine were used to pre-treat roads statewide. Across Tennessee, state offices closed for January 22, warming centers opened, and the Red Cross placed shelters on standby.[71] The Tennessee Highway Patrol asked for people to remain off the roads, saying, "We are desperately asking you please DON'T DRIVE".[44] [72]

British Isles

The storm was forecast to cross the Atlantic Ocean and affect the British Isles from January 26 to 28. The storm was expected to be less severe, with rain rather than snow; however, the possibility of strong winds and localized flooding was noted.[73] Particular concern was raised over areas that suffered from significant flooding during the preceding months.[74] [75] Wind gusts as high as 70mph were forecast for the Hebrides and 50to for coastal Scotland.[76] The storm in the British Isles was far less severe than in the United States and Storm Gertrude a few days later may have been worse.[77]

Impact

The storm's widespread effects paralyzed travel across the eastern United States as it produced more than 20inches of snow across a large area along the Appalachian Mountains.[78] At least 55 fatalities have been attributed to the storm and its aftermath: 12 in Virginia, 9 in Pennsylvania, 6 in New Jersey, 6 in New York, 6 in North Carolina, 4 in South Carolina, 3 in Maryland, 3 in Washington, D.C., 1 in Arkansas, 1 in Delaware, 1 in Georgia, 1 in Kentucky, 1 in Massachusetts, and 1 in Ohio.[79] Throughout the affected region, more than 631,000 people lost power: 270,000 in New Jersey,[80] 147,000 in North Carolina, 66,000 in Georgia, 55,000 in Virginia, 47,000 collectively in Delaware and Maryland,[81] and nearly 30,000 in South Carolina.

Economic losses—from lost sales revenue and wages—are estimated between $500 million and $3 billion. Moody's Analytics indicated the highest losses, stating $2.5–3 billion; however, the storm's occurrence on a weekend accounted for less losses than what would otherwise be expected.[82] Planalytics placed losses at $850 million and IHS Global Insight estimated losses between $500 million and $1 billion. Although an estimate was not provided, AON Benfield placed losses in the billions of dollars, noting similarities to the Blizzard of 1996 which inflicted $4.6 billion in economic losses.[83] Despite the expected major losses, the rush to buy supplies ahead of the storm's arrival may mitigate the overall impact.[84] The airline industry suffered approximately $200 million in lost revenue.[85]

Using the Regional Snowfall Index, the storm ranked as a Category 5, "extreme", storm for the Northeast and a Category 4, "crippling", for the Southeast. It was also ranked as a Category 3, "major", event in the Ohio Valley. Approximately 103 million people were in the storm's path,[86] including 33 million in the expected blizzard area. About 21 million people in the Northeast experienced more than 20inches of snow. Half of the affected people were in the Northeast (which includes the Northeast megalopolis); the storm's RSI reached 20.138 in this region, the fourth-highest on record for the region. The primary factor driving its high classification was the affected population. The storm's RSI of 13.776 in the Southeast was the twelfth-highest on record.[86]

Severe weather on the Gulf Coast

During January 21 through the early hours of January 22, severe thunderstorms brought damaging winds and hail to portions of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida. Five tornadoes touched down across Mississippi: an EF0 near Crystal Springs, an EF0 near Homewood, an EF1 near Loyd Star, an EF1 near Pinola, and an EF2 near Sumrall. Numerous trees and power lines were downed, multiple structures were damaged, and a few were destroyed by the tornadoes.[87] Straight line winds near Improve, Lamar County, Mississippi, significantly damaged 10–12 homes. Hail reached 2.75inches in diameter in Wilmer, Louisiana. The most significant damage occurred overnight across the Florida Panhandle and neighboring Alabama. Winds gusting to 73mph downed numerous trees and power lines and damaged structures.[88]

Southeastern states

Snow fell across a large portion of Arkansas on January 21–22, with a daily record of 7.2inches observed just outside Little Rock.[89] [90] Snowfall was confined to the eastern half of the state, with freezing rain amounting to 0.25inches observed in northeastern counties.[91] Strong winds in excess of 35mph—with a gust of 47mph measured in Jonesboro—left more than 16,000 people in the state without power. One fatality near Hoxie was due to slippery roads.[92]

Early on January 22, heavy snow fell across parts of western Tennessee. Roads around Nashville quickly became impassable, including portions of Interstates 40 and 24, and local police reported more than 200 accidents.[93] In Lexington, Kentucky, one accident led to injury; 17 other accidents were reported. Multiple accidents in Rockcastle County prompted the closure of 12miles of I-75 in Kentucky.[34] Along a 35miles stretch of Interstate 75 in Kentucky, hundreds of drivers became stranded for more than 16 hours on January 22–23. In a separate incident, an 11miles stretch of Interstate 77 in West Virginia was blocked by stuck tractor-trailers that were lying across the highway.[94] The National Guard was deployed to provide people with food, water, and fuel.[95] A transportation worker died when his truck skidded off icy roads.[96]

Treacherous road conditions in North Carolina resulted in at least 571 accidents and 800 "service calls" from police. Five deaths were reported across the state. One person died in a collision on Interstate 95. Numerous roads were shut down accordingly.[97] One person was killed and three others were injured in Forsyth County. An accident along Interstate 77 near Troutman resulted in the death of a 4-year-old boy.[98] Freezing rain resulted in widespread power outages, bringing down numerous trees and power lines in the state. Many roads closed because of debris, including portions of Interstate 40 in Johnston County. Approximately 147,000 people lost power in North Carolina, with Wake County accounting for 50,000 of the total.[99]

Four people died in South Carolina: two from carbon monoxide poisoning in Greenville, one in a car accident on an icy road in Greenville County, and another from an accident in Jonesville.[100] Nearly 30,000 people lost power in the state.[101] Portions of Interstates 26 and 95 were temporarily shut down for icy conditions.[102] Flurries were observed as far south as the coastal regions of the state, including the ACE Basin as well as Charleston.[103]

Upwards of 8inches of snow fell across Georgia, with the highest totals confined to northern parts of the state. High winds downed trees and power lines, leaving approximately 66,000 people without power across the state.[104] A postal worker was killed when strong winds blew a large branch off a tree, crushing him in his car.[105] Snow fell as far south as Mobile, Alabama,[106] with additional flurries extending into Jacksonville and Gainesville along the Florida Panhandle late on January 22. Temperatures in Gainesville fell to 28F.[107] Further south in Florida, record rain of 4.79inches fell in West Palm Beach.[108]

Mid-Atlantic states

Maximum snow depth was measured at 42inches in Glengary, West Virginia, on January 24. Baltimore, Maryland, recorded its largest snowfall on record.[109] Two people died from heart attacks while shoveling snow and a third from undetermined causes across Maryland.[110] [111] A large portion of the Ocean City fishing pier was destroyed by rough seas and high winds.[112] West Virginia's emergency management reported Interstate 77 to be "completely shut down" following an accident involving semi-trailers. The National Guard was called in to assist clearing the stranded vehicles.[94] Six people died from snow-related incidents in Virginia.[113] Virginia State Police responded to 989 accidents and 793 disabled vehicles through the evening of January 22.[94] A total of 12 people died in storm-related incidents across Virginia. One person died when their car skid off a road in Chesapeake and collided with a tree. Five people died from hypothermia: one each in Charles City, Gloucester County, Hampton, Henry County, and Wise County.[114] A combination of snow and ice accumulation caused the roof of Donk's Theatre in Hudgins, Virginia, to collapse; the structure was deemed a total loss and will be demolished.[115] The roof of a 4,700 ft2 (437 m2) building collapsed in Charlottesville.[116] Seven people required hospitalization for carbon monoxide poisoning at an apartment complex in Herndon when vents became clogged with snow.[117] The snow completely destroyed two parking lots at Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge.[118] Three people died while shoveling snow in Washington, D.C.[119]

Snow-related incidents resulted in nine deaths across Pennsylvania. In Harrisburg, snowfall from the storm was reported as 30.2inches, breaking the city's previous record snowfall of 25inches which was set in February 1983.[120] Near Bedford, approximately 500 vehicles became stuck along a westbound stretch of the Pennsylvania Turnpike for over 24 hours from January 22–23 near the eastern approach to the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel. Among the stranded vehicles were one bus carrying the Duquesne University men's basketball team and another carrying Temple University's women's gymnastics team.[121] Despite the scale of the incident, no major injuries were reported.[122] The band Guster, stranded in Pittsburgh by the blocking of the turnpike, held an impromptu concert in an alley.[123] Four people died while shoveling snow: two in both Lancaster and Montgomery counties.[124] [125] [126] One of the dead in Montgomery County was a woman who was 8-months pregnant; the baby was declared dead on-scene when paramedics arrived.[124] [127] Another man died from carbon monoxide poisoning in his car in Reading after a passing snow plow buried his car in snow.[128]

One person died in Magnolia, Delaware, after suffering a heart attack while shoveling.[129] A power outage at the Delaware City Refinery, thought to be related to the storm, forced the facility to shut down after chemicals were released.[130] A mother and her 1-year-old son died from carbon monoxide poisoning in Passaic, New Jersey, after snowfall blocked their vehicle's tailpipe; a 3-year-old girl was hospitalized,[131] [132] but later died on January 27.[133] Three other people died while attempting to walk home during the blizzard: one each in East Greenwich Township, Hackensack, and Mahwah.[134] [135]

Snowfall across New York City and Long Island was more intense than initially forecast, falling at rates of 3inches per hour at times. Before the travel ban was implemented, buses struggled to make their routes and long delays were common.[136] At Central Park, a storm-total accumulation of 27.5abbr=onNaNabbr=on was observed, the highest total on record for the city since observations began in 1869. This surpassed the previous record of 26.9abbr=onNaNabbr=on measured during the February 2006 blizzard. The snowstorm made January 2016 the 2nd snowiest January in New York City history, while tying it with February 1934 for the 6th snowiest month.[137] Accumulations reached an all-time record high of 30.5inches at John F. Kennedy International Airport. Police across New York City responded to more than 200 accidents and 300 disabled vehicles.[138] Emergency personnel responded to about 3,000 9-1-1 calls across the city. Five people died while shoveling snow: two in Queens, two in unknown parts of the city, and one in Staten Island.[139] [140] At least two deaths in Long Island were from shoveling snow.[141] One person was killed by a snow plow in Oyster Bay Cove on Long Island.[142]

Coastal flooding

Significant coastal flooding took place in Delaware and New Jersey.[143] The first, and most severe, round of flooding took place during the morning of January 23. A second round took place after the storm's passage on the morning of January 24, concurrent with high tide.[144] Record tides occurred in Lewes, Delaware. Approximately 20miles of dunes along Delaware's 24miles oceanfront coast sustained significant damage, with many areas flattened.[145] Forty people required evacuation in Long Neck and Oak Orchard.[146] Delaware Route 1 was shut down between Bethany Beach and Dewey Beach for flooding.[147]

Tides at Cape May, New Jersey, reached a record 9.26feet, surpassing the previous highest of 8.67feet set during Hurricane Sandy in 2012. Fifty people required evacuation in Atlantic City,[94] and at least 150 homes were flooded. Strong winds accompanying the flooding caused damage to many homes.[148] Streets in Ocean City and Stone Harbor were inundated with several feet of water; according to a resident in Stone Harbor, water reached 5feet in depth on some streets. Effects were most severe along the Delaware Bay.[149] Combined with snowfall and freezing temperatures, the flooded roads became a mix of ice and slush.[144] Long Beach Island, still recovering from the effects of Hurricane Sandy, sustained severe beach erosion.[150] The storm's tide and waves carved 15feet cliffs along coastal beaches.[151] A recently constructed dune in Belmar held back most of the water, with one minor breach along its 1.3miles expanse.[144]

New England

Southern New England experienced significant snow accumulations from Jan 23 to Jan 24. Around a foot of snow fell across Southern Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Southeastern Massachusetts. Blizzard conditions affected southeastern Massachusetts for several hours, with Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard reporting such conditions for four hours. Blizzard conditions were reported in Bridgeport for 4 hours lasting from 8 am to 12 pm.[152] Snow totals reached 16.0 in (40.6 cm) in Norwalk, Connecticut and 13.0 in (33.0 cm) on Block Island, Rhode Island. Wind gusts on Block Island reached 75mph while gusts in New Haven reached 52 mph (83 km/h).[153] One person died after being struck by a snow plow.[105]

Newfoundland and Nova Scotia

After leaving the Eastern United States, the storm complex brought light snowfall to coastal areas of Nova Scotia, Canada, on January 24. Environment Canada indicated accumulations up to 5cm (02inches) alongside wind gusts of 30to. Residents, however, reported up to 30cm (10inches) of snow in Shelburne County.[154] Street parking was banned in Halifax on select streets to enable easier clearing of roads.[155] On January 25, a Boeing 767 traveling from Miami, Florida, to Milan, Italy, encountered severe turbulence produced by the storm about 300abbr=onNaNabbr=on off Newfoundland. Of the 203 people on board, including crew, seven were injured. The aircraft made an emergency landing at St. John's International Airport.[156]

Aftermath

Many cities struggled to cope with the snowfall, including Washington, D.C., where schools and government offices remained closed through January 26, three days after the storm. Schools in Baltimore, Maryland, and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, also remained closed through January 26.[3] Side streets around the D.C. area were unplowed through January 26.[157] Through January 27, Washington, D.C. police issued $1,078,000 worth of parking tickets and $65,600 in fines for vehicles parked or abandoned on snow emergency routes. At least 656 vehicles were towed.[158]

The New York Post described Queens, New York, as "basically forgotten" on January 25 as roads remained covered with snow.[3] [159] Many residents complained that snowplows did not come through their area until at least a day after the storm passed. Crews expressed that certain areas, such as in the Bronx, were difficult to navigate with snow plows and there was no place to put the snow. A resident of Pelham Bay stated that 3-1-1 operators were not picking up calls. Mayor De Blasio toured areas of Staten Island on January 24 and urged people to be patient.[160] In contrast, both Governor Cuomo and Mayor De Blasio were praised for their handling of the storm prior to its arrival, and for being the first to issue a travel ban, which is credited for potentially saving lives.[161]

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, who flew back to the state from New Hampshire during his presidential campaign, left to resume campaigning shortly after the storm passed. He was criticized for his quick departure and heated responses to questions about why he left the state. He stated that while there was some locally significant flood damage in Southern New Jersey, the overall effects across the state did not warrant his presence. He responded to one person by saying, "I don't know what you expect me to do. You want me to go down there with a mop?"[162] [163] A Stockton University graduate started up a fund to provide 1,000 mops to Christie in response to his comment.[164] On January 26, Christie apologized to North Wildwood Mayor Patrick Rosenello for calling him "crazy" during his response to criticism the day prior. Christie also requested that Rosenello apologize on his behalf to first responders, residents, and business owners.[165]

In March, President Barack Obama declared Delaware,[166] Maryland,[167] New Jersey,[168] Pennsylvania,[169] Virginia,[170] and Washington, D.C., major disaster areas.[171] The federal funding would only cover costs incurred by public infrastructure, debris removal, and emergency measures to ensure public safety.[172] [173] Preliminary estimates places the total cost of assistance at $168,334,023, with New Jersey accounting for $82,663,604.[174]

Snowfall measurement reviews

Following the storm, the National Weather Service conducted a review of eight snowfall observations following concerns over their quality. Measurements from Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, Dulles International Airport, Baltimore/Washington International Airport, John F. Kennedy International Airport, LaGuardia Airport, and Philadelphia International Airport were verified as reliable. The total at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport was brought into question immediately following the blizzard as the snow observers lost their measuring board during the storm;[175] however, the assessment determined that proper procedure was continued even after the board was lost and the total was considered accurate. A review of measurements at Central Park, New York, revealed the 26.8inches observation was the result of a communication error and revised the storm-total to 27.5inches—an all-time record for New York City. Furthermore, the 28.1inches measurement at Newark International Airport, New Jersey, was invalidated due to measurements being taken every hour instead of every six hours thus inflating the total.[176] The State Climate Extremes Committee also conducted a review of a potential 24-hour state snowfall record at Mount Mitchell in North Carolina. Their results showed the 24-hour observation of 41inches to be in error, erroneously inflating the snowfall totals. Properly adjusting for liquid snow ratios, the total was revised to 21inches. The storm-total accumulation was also revised from 66inches to 33inches.

Snowfall accumulations and records

List of highest snowfall accumulations by state during the 2016 blizzard
StateLocationAmountRef.
AlabamaHarvest3.5abbr=onNaNabbr=on
ArkansasCabot, Jacksonville, Sherwood8abbr=onNaNabbr=on
ConnecticutNorwalk16abbr=onNaNabbr=on
DelawareWoodside17.2abbr=onNaNabbr=on
GeorgiaGermany Valley8.9abbr=onNaNabbr=on[177]
IllinoisShawneetown5.5abbr=onNaNabbr=on
IndianaFloyds Knobs5abbr=onNaNabbr=on
KansasBarnes10abbr=onNaNabbr=on
KentuckyBooneville22abbr=onNaNabbr=on
LouisianaHaynesville2.5abbr=onNaNabbr=on
MarylandNorth Potomac38.5abbr=onNaNabbr=on
MassachusettsWest Harwich15.5abbr=onNaNabbr=on
MississippiMyrtle, Oxford2abbr=onNaNabbr=on
MissouriEast Prairie3abbr=onNaNabbr=on
NebraskaHebron9abbr=onNaNabbr=on
New JerseyMorris Plains33abbr=onNaNabbr=on
New YorkJackson Heights34abbr=onNaNabbr=on
North CarolinaMount Mitchell33abbr=onNaNabbr=on[178]
OhioGraysville17abbr=onNaNabbr=on
PennsylvaniaGreencastle38.3abbr=onNaNabbr=on
Rhode IslandWesterly15.5abbr=onNaNabbr=on
South CarolinaInman7.5abbr=onNaNabbr=on
TennesseeJamestown14abbr=onNaNabbr=on
VirginiaGainesboro38abbr=onNaNabbr=on[179]
Washington, D.C.Dalecarlia Reservoir26abbr=onNaNabbr=on
West VirginiaGlengary42abbr=onNaNabbr=on[180] [181]
List of all-time and daily snowfall records set during the 2016 blizzard
StateLocationAmountRecord typeRef.
ArkansasLittle Rock7.2abbr=onNaNabbr=onDaily (January 22)
ConnecticutBridgeport9.5abbr=onNaNabbr=onDaily (January 23)[182]
DelawareWilmington13.1abbr=onNaNabbr=onDaily (January 23)
IndianaEvansville5.1abbr=onNaNabbr=onDaily (January 22)
KentuckyBowling Green12.2abbr=onNaNabbr=onDaily (January 22)[183]
KentuckyJackson15.7abbr=onNaNabbr=onDaily (January 22)
KentuckyPaducah5.9abbr=onNaNabbr=onDaily (January 22)
MarylandBaltimore–Washington
International Airport
29.2abbr=onNaNabbr=onAll-time
New JerseyAtlantic City10.1abbr=onNaNabbr=onDaily (January 23)
New YorkCentral Park27.5abbr=onNaNabbr=onAll-time
New YorkIslip23.4abbr=onNaNabbr=onDaily (January 23)
New YorkJohn F. Kennedy
International Airport
30.5abbr=onNaNabbr=onAll-time
New YorkLaGuardia Airport27.9abbr=onNaNabbr=onAll-time
North CarolinaAsheville10.6abbr=onNaNabbr=onDaily (January 22)
North CarolinaRaleigh–Durham International
Airport
1.2abbr=onNaNabbr=onDaily (January 22)
PennsylvaniaAllentown31.9abbr=onNaNabbr=onAll-time[184]
PennsylvaniaHarrisburg30.2abbr=onNaNabbr=onAll-time
PennsylvaniaPhiladelphia International
Airport
19.4abbr=onNaNabbr=onDaily (January 23)
TennesseeNashville8abbr=onNaNabbr=onDaily (January 22)
VirginiaNorfolk1.2abbr=onNaNabbr=onDaily (January 23)
VirginiaRichmond5.3abbr=onNaNabbr=onDaily (January 23)
VirginiaRonald Reagan Washington
National Airport
11.3abbr=onNaNabbr=onDaily (January 23)
VirginiaWashington Dulles
International Airport
22.1abbr=onNaNabbr=onDaily (January 23)
VirginiaWallops Island1abbr=onNaNabbr=onDaily (January 23)

Naming

See also: Winter storm naming in the United States. The storm has received several nicknames from various media outlets. The name Winter Storm Jonas was created by The Weather Channel at the beginning of the winter storm season, and assigned to the storm system when it was forecast; it has also been used in international media,[185] and was used by New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio[186] and the United States Postal Service.[187] Reception of the naming of storms has been mixed; The New York Times refers to the name "Jonas" as a marketing ploy while The Weather Channel maintains that it helps others prepare in advance.[188] The Washington Post named the storm Snowzilla, referencing the 2014–16 El Niño event which has been named the "Godzilla El Niño".[189] [190] Connecticut-based WFSB named the system Anna, after former First Lady Anna Harrison.[191] Other sources have dubbed the storm simply Blizzard of 2016 or Blizzard 2016.[192]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Potentially historic blizzard looms over D.C., more than 2 feet of snow projected . . Chicago . January 21, 2016 . January 22, 2016.
  2. News: Angela Fritz. The Washington Post. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. Eastern Seaboard braces for potentially historic winter storm. Washington, D.C..
  3. Web site: Sean Breslin. The Weather Channel. January 26, 2016. January 26, 2016. Winter Storm Jonas: At Least 48 Dead; Roof Collapses Reported; D.C. Remains Shut Down. Atlanta, Georgia.
  4. Web site: National Climate Report - January 2016 January 2016 Blizzard State of the Climate National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI). 2021-02-05. www.ncdc.noaa.gov.
  5. Web site: January 2016 snowstorm was a Category 5 event NOAA Climate.gov. 2021-02-05. www.climate.gov.
  6. News: WRAL-TV. CBS. January 21, 2016. January 21, 2016. The Latest: Snow blamed for 2 North Carolina traffic deaths. Raleigh, North Carolina. https://web.archive.org/web/20160122165636/http://www.wral.com/forecasters-sweat-multiple-scenarios-for-north-carolina/15256529/. 2016-01-22. dead.
  7. News: WTTG. 21st Century Fox. January 21, 2016. January 21, 2016. Carmageddon 2.0: DC's ride home from hell in 1 inch of snow. Washington, D.C.. January 23, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160123142649/http://www.fox5dc.com/weather/78028676-story. dead.
  8. News: Tom Liddy. ABC News. January 21, 2016. January 21, 2016. Slick Roads Spark More Than 100 Accidents, Strand 'Hundreds' in DC Area.
  9. News: WSB-TV. American Broadcasting Company. January 19, 2016. January 21, 2016. Officials say state is ready for winter weather. Atlanta, Georgia. https://web.archive.org/web/20160122211850/http://www.wsbtv.com/news/news/local/officials-say-state-ready-winter-weather/np7zg/. 2016-01-22. dead.
  10. News: WSB-TV. American Broadcasting Company. January 20, 2016. January 21, 2016. Icy conditions reported on Georgia roads. Ringgold, Georgia. https://web.archive.org/web/20160122110724/http://www.wsbtv.com/news/news/local/ice-reported-georgia-roads/np8Fz/. 2016-01-22. dead.
  11. News: WTVF. E. W. Scripps Company. January 20, 2016. January 21, 2016. Middle TN, Southern KY Waking Up To Snow, Ice. Nashville, Tennessee. https://web.archive.org/web/20160122092445/http://www.newschannel5.com/news/local-news/middle-tn-southern-ky-waking-up-to-snow. 2016-01-22. dead.
  12. News: WATE-TV. Media General. January 20, 2016. January 21, 2016. Knox County sheriff: 1 dead, 1 injured after speeding car slides off road. Knoxville, Tennessee. January 22, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160122020818/http://wate.com/2016/01/20/injuries-reported-in-crash-on-snowy-knox-county-road/. dead.
  13. News: Associated Press. WJLA-TV. Sinclair Broadcast Group. January 21, 2016. January 22, 2016. At least 4 killed in snowstorm-related deaths in Ky., N.C., Tenn.. Washington, D.C..
  14. Web site: Paul Kocin . Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion: 429 PM EST Thu Jan 21 2016 . January 21, 2016 . Weather Prediction Center . January 21, 2016 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160123212845/http://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/discussions/hpcdiscussions.php?disc=qpfhsd . January 23, 2016 .
  15. Web site: Frank Pereira . Short Range Forecast Discussion: 310 AM EST Wed Jan 20 2016 . January 20, 2016 . Weather Prediction Center . January 21, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160128033250/http://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/discussions/hpcdiscussions.php?disc=pmdspd&version=3&fmt=reg . dead . January 28, 2016 .
  16. Web site: Brendon Rubin-Oster . Short Range Forecast Discussion: 321 AM EST Thu Jan 21 2016 . January 21, 2016 . Weather Prediction Center . January 21, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20151219003647/http://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/discussions/hpcdiscussions.php?disc=pmdspd&version=1&fmt=reg . dead . December 19, 2015 .
  17. Web site: Patrick Burke . Brian Hurley . Quantitative Precipitation Forecast Discussion: 128 PM EST Thu Jan 21 2016: 321 AM EST Thu Jan 21 2016 . January 21, 2016 . Weather Prediction Center . January 21, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20151022162225/http://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/discussions/hpcdiscussions.php?disc=qpfpfd&version=2&fmt=reg . dead . October 22, 2015 .
  18. Web site: Steve Goss. Day 1 Convective Outlook: 0150 PM CST Thu Jan 21 2016. Storm Prediction Center. Jan 21, 2016.
  19. Web site: Burke. Patrick. Orisson. Andrew. Storm Summary Number 04 For Eastern U.S. Major Winter Storm. Weather Prediction Center. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. January 22, 2016. College Park, Maryland. January 22, 2016.
  20. Web site: WPC surface analysis valid for 01/24/2016 at 09 UTC. Weather Prediction Center. January 24, 2016. April 5, 2021.
  21. Web site: Europe Weather Analysis on 2016-01-25. Free University of Berlin. January 25, 2016. April 5, 2021. August 31, 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210831201731/http://www.met.fu-berlin.de/de/wetter/maps/Analyse_20160125.gif. dead.
  22. News: January 25, 2016. Rain and strong winds this week. The Met Office. January 26, 2016.
  23. News: January 27, 2016. Worst Storm for a Century. Nathan Rao. Nick Gutteridge. Zoie O'Brien. Kate Mansfield. Express. January 29, 2016.
  24. Web site: Europe Weather Analysis on 2016-01-29. Free University of Berlin. January 29, 2016. April 5, 2021. August 31, 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210831201805/http://www.met.fu-berlin.de/de/wetter/maps/Analyse_20160129.gif. dead.
  25. Web site: Various National Weather Service offices . . January 22, 2016 . January 22, 2016 . Blizzard Warnings Across the United States on January 22, 2016 . January 26, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160126001318/http://forecast.weather.gov/wwamap/wwatxtget.php?cwa=usa&wwa=blizzard%20warning . dead .
  26. Web site: Various National Weather Service offices . . January 21, 2016 . January 21, 2016 . Winter Storm Warnings Across the United States on January 21, 2016 . January 26, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160126000426/http://forecast.weather.gov/wwamap/wwatxtget.php?cwa=usa&wwa=Winter%20Storm%20Warning . dead .
  27. Web site: Various National Weather Service offices . . January 22, 2016 . January 22, 2016 . Winter Storm Warnings Across the United States on January 22, 2016 . January 26, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160126000426/http://forecast.weather.gov/wwamap/wwatxtget.php?cwa=usa&wwa=Winter%20Storm%20Warning . dead .
  28. Web site: Various National Weather Service offices . . January 21, 2016 . January 21, 2016 . Winter Storm Warnings Across the United States on January 21, 2016 . February 1, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160201005335/http://forecast.weather.gov/wwamap/wwatxtget.php?cwa=usa&wwa=Freezing%20Rain%20Advisory . dead .
  29. Web site: Various National Weather Service offices . . January 21, 2016 . January 21, 2016 . Winter Weather Advisories Across the United States on January 21, 2016 . January 25, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160125233408/http://forecast.weather.gov/wwamap/wwatxtget.php?cwa=usa&wwa=Winter%20Weather%20Advisory . dead .
  30. Web site: Various National Weather Service offices . . January 21, 2016 . January 21, 2016 . Storm Warnings Across the United States on January 21, 2016 . January 26, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160126210841/http://forecast.weather.gov/wwamap/wwatxtget.php?cwa=usa&wwa=Storm%20Warning . dead .
  31. Web site: Various National Weather Service offices . . January 22, 2016 . January 22, 2016 . Storm Warnings Across the United States on January 22, 2016 . January 26, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160126210841/http://forecast.weather.gov/wwamap/wwatxtget.php?cwa=usa&wwa=Storm%20Warning . dead .
  32. News: WTXF-TV. 21st Century Fox. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. State of Emergency Issued for Delaware, Level 1 Driving Warning Starts at Midnight. Wilmington, Delaware. https://web.archive.org/web/20160124023740/http://www.fox29.com/news/79941774-story. January 24, 2016. dead.
  33. News: WXIA-TV. NBCUniversal. January 21, 2016. January 21, 2016. State of emergency list in Georgia extended to 21 counties. https://archive.today/20160223100643/http://www.11alive.com/story/weather/2016/01/21/two-new-counties-added-georgia-state-emergency/79125410/. dead. February 23, 2016. Atlanta, Georgia.
  34. News: Greg Kocher. Lexington Herald-Leader. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. Bevin declares emergency as snow buries much of Kentucky. Lexington, Kentucky.
  35. Web site: Government of New York. January 23, 2016. January 23, 2016. Governor Cuomo Declares State of Emergency for New York City, Long Island, and Lower Hudson Valley as Winter Storm Hits Region. February 1, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160201014016/https://www.governor.ny.gov/news/governor-cuomo-declares-state-emergency-new-york-city-long-island-and-lower-hudson-valley. dead.
  36. News: Associated Press. Bristol Herald Courier. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie declares state of emergency ahead of blizzard, flooding. Newark, New Jersey.
  37. News: Joe Marusak . David Perlmutt . The Charlotte Observer. January 21, 2016. January 21, 2016. Snow, wintry mix begins to fall in Charlotte area; CMS cancels school. Charlotte, North Carolina.
  38. News: WPVI-TV. The Walt Disney Company. January 21, 2016. January 21, 2016. Gov. Wolf Declares State of Emergency for Pennsylvania Ahead of Snowstorm. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
  39. News: Chattanooga Times Free Press. January 21, 2016. January 21, 2016. Tennessee declares state of emergency ahead of 'blizzard-like conditions'. Chattanooga, Tennessee.
  40. News: WSAZ-TV. NBCUniversal. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. W.Va. Governor issues State of Emergency. Charleston, West Virginia.
  41. News: Ben Mutzabaugh . Harriet Baskas . USA Today. January 21, 2016. January 21, 2016. East Coast blizzard already a travel nightmare.
  42. News: Carla Caldwell. Atlanta Business Chronicle. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. Close to 5,000 flights cancelled due to storm; Delta drops fee to reschedule (Update).
  43. News: Samantha Masunaga. Los Angeles Times. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. Thousands of flights canceled or delayed as East Coast snowstorm brews. Los Angeles, California.
  44. Web site: Greg Botelho . Ralph Ellis . Phil Gast . CNN. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. Blizzard with 'life and death implications' hits D.C., Mid-Atlantic.
  45. News: Ben Mutzabaugh. USA Today. January 23, 2016. January 23, 2016. Blizzard 2016: 10,000 flight cancellations and counting. Washington, D.C..
  46. News: CBC News. January 23, 2016. January 23, 2016. U.S. storm delays, cancels Saturday flights at Pearson.
  47. News: Irish Examiner. January 23, 2016. January 23, 2016. UK cancels dozens of flights after blizzard batters America's east coast.
  48. News: Alex Johnson . Jon Schuppe . NBC News. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. Blizzard 2016: Millions in the Path of Monster Snowstorm .
  49. News: US blizzard forces NBA, NHL postponements. The Daily Star. Beirut. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016.
  50. News: Winter Storm Jonas forces postponements across college basketball. CBS Sports. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016.
  51. News: WJLA-TV. Sinclair Broadcast Group. January 21, 2016. January 21, 2016. State of emergency declared in D.C., schools closed Friday. Washington, D.C..
  52. News: WTOP-FM. Hubbard Broadcasting. January 21, 2016. January 21, 2016. Md., Va., D.C. declare states of emergency. Washington, D.C..
  53. News: WRC-TV. NBCUniversal. January 21, 2016. January 21, 2016. Area Schools Cancel, Delay Classes Due to Snow.
  54. News: Greg Botelho and Ed Payne. CNN. January 21, 2016. January 21, 2016. Snowstorm threatens East; Washington, Baltimore under blizzard warnings.
  55. News: Associated Press. Fox News. January 21, 2016. January 21, 2016. States of emergency declared as East Coast braces for winter storm.
  56. News: Halsey III . Ashley . Duggan . Paul . January 21, 2016 . D.C. region braces for epic blizzard; Metro to shut down subway, bus lines . The Washington Post . January 22, 2016.
  57. January 21, 2016 . Metro to suspend service during blizzard . . January 22, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160123194140/http://www.wmata.com/about_metro/news/PressReleaseDetail.cfm?ReleaseID=6029 . 2016-01-23 . dead .
  58. Web site: Metro plans restoration of limited underground Metrorail, "lifeline" Metrobus service for Monday, January 25. January 24, 2016. January 24, 2016. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA). https://web.archive.org/web/20160127021644/http://www.wmata.com/about_metro/news/PressReleaseDetail.cfm?ReleaseID=6031. 2016-01-27. dead.
  59. News: Hylton. David. Bahorich. Susan. Flights, bus travel canceled out of Richmond. 27 January 2016. NBC 12 News. WWBT. 23 January 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160201205202/http://www.nbc12.com/story/31038058/all-morning-flights-canceled-at-ric. 1 February 2016. dead.
  60. News: Oliver. Ned. 11th biggest snowfall on record for Richmond; schools cancel classes. 27 January 2016. Richmond Times-Dispatch. 24 January 2016.
  61. News: WGAL. Hearst Corporation. January 23, 2016. January 23, 2016. Lebanon declares state of emergency, travel ban. Lebanon, Pennsylvania.
  62. News: Megan Trimble. PA Media Group. Advance Digital. January 23, 2016. January 23, 2016. Disaster Emergency: Travel bans issued in York County.
  63. News: philly.com. Philadelphia Media Network, LLC. January 23, 2016. January 23, 2016. Transportation agencies brace for storm. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
  64. News: WABC-TV. The Walt Disney Company. January 21, 2016. January 21, 2016. New York City Prepared for Winter Storm De Blasio Says. New York, New York.
  65. Web site: Dorothy Schnure. January 22, 2016. January 26, 2016. GMP Sends Crews South to Help with Massive Snowstorn. vtdigger.com. Colchester, Vermont.
  66. News: WNYW. 21st Century Fox. January 23, 2016. January 23, 2016. Travel ban in New York City. January 24, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160124090626/http://www.fox5ny.com/news/81021383-story. dead.
  67. https://www.nj.com/traffic/2016/01/nj_transit_to_suspend_service_at_2_am.html NJ Transit shutting down service at 2 a.m. Saturday due to the blizzard
  68. Web site: Myles Ma. New Jersey On-Line. Advance Digital. January 24, 2016. January 25, 2016. Newark mayor extends travel ban to 1 p.m.. Newark, New Jersey.
  69. News: WNBC. NBCUniversal. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. 'Winter Weather Emergency' Declared in NYC Ahead of Nor'easter. New York, New York.
  70. Web site: WDEL 101.7FM – 2016 Delaware Blizzard Storm Hub, Day 2 – Level 2 Driving Restrictions now in place. www.wdel.com. 2016-01-28. https://web.archive.org/web/20160127074436/http://wdel.com/story/73053-2016-delaware-blizzard-storm-hub-day-2-level-2-driving-restrictions-now-in-place. 2016-01-27. dead.
  71. News: Associated Press. Chattanooga Times Free Press. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. Snow, freezing rain fall across much of Tennessee. Nashville, Tennessee.
  72. TNHighwayPatrol. Tennessee Highway Patrol. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. If you are thinking about going out for a Friday night on the town DON'T! We are desperately asking you please DON'T DRIVE. #STAYN. 690628680444436480.
  73. News: Alexandra Sims. The Independent. January 23, 2016. January 26, 2016. UK weather: Storm Jonas on way to Britain as low pressure system moves across Atlantic.
  74. News: Sky News. January 25, 2016. January 26, 2016. UK on alert as snowstorm crosses Atlantic. January 26, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160126091104/http://www.skynews.com.au/news/world/europe/2016/01/25/uk-on-alert-as-snowstorm-crosses-atlantic.html. dead.
  75. News: BBC. January 25, 2016. January 26, 2016. US snow storm to bring heavy rain and gales to UK. London, United Kingdom.
  76. News: Belfast Telegraph. January 26, 2016. January 26, 2016. Weather alert as Northern Ireland faces heavy downpours. Belfast, Northern Ireland.
  77. [BBC]
  78. News: Barbara Goldberg . Idrees Ali . . January 23, 2016 . January 23, 2016 . Blizzard intensifies as it slams New York, floods New Jersey . January 23, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160123215736/http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-weather-idUSKCN0V107L . New York, New York . dead .
  79. News: Frank Lewis. Portsmouth Daily Times. January 23, 2016. January 23, 2016. Sledding teen killed by truck.
  80. Web site: National Weather Service Office in Mt. Holly, New Jersey. National Centers for Environmental Information. 2016. April 20, 2016. New Jersey Event Report.
  81. News: Associated Press. WTOP-FM. Hubbard Broadcasting. January 24, 2016. January 26, 2016. Power restored across much of the Mid-Atlantic region. Baltimore, Maryland. https://web.archive.org/web/20160128120357/http://wtop.com/local/2016/01/power-restored-across-much-of-the-mid-atlantic-region/. 2016-01-28. dead.
  82. News: CNN. WTVR-TV. Tribune Media. January 25, 2016. January 25, 2016. Blizzard will cost up to $3 billion. New York, New York.
  83. News: Jonathan Berr. CBS News. January 25, 2016. January 26, 2016. This blizzard may land a $3 billion blow.
  84. News: Associated Press. CBS News. January 25, 2016. January 26, 2016. Blizzard's hit on economy in hundreds of millions?. Washington, D.C..
  85. News: Benjamin Zhang. Business Insider. January 25, 2016. January 25, 2016. Airlines could lose $200 million due to the blizzard – but they won't feel the pain.
  86. Web site: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. February 18, 2016. February 21, 2016. Putting the January 22–24 Snowstorm in Historical Context.
  87. National Weather Service Office in Jackson, Mississippi . . January 25, 2016 . January 26, 2016 . NWS Damage Survey for 01/21/16 Tornado Event . January 26, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160126115416/http://www.nws.noaa.gov/view/validProds.php?prod=PNS&node=KJAN . dead .
  88. Web site: Storm Prediction Center. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. 160121's Storm Reports (1200 UTC − 1159 UTC). Norman, Oklahoma.
  89. National Weather Service Office in Little Rock, Arkansas . . January 22, 2016 . January 22, 2016 . 24-Hour Snowfall Totals for 01/21 to 01/22 . January 31, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160131014335/http://forecast.weather.gov/product.php?site=LZK&product=PNS&issuedby=LZK . dead .
  90. National Weather Service Office in Little Rock, Arkansas . . January 22, 2016 . January 22, 2016 . Record Snowfall Set at North Little Rock . January 30, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160130132705/http://forecast.weather.gov/product.php?site=LZK&product=RER&issuedby=LZK . dead .
  91. National Weather Service Office in Little Rock, Arkansas . . January 22, 2016 . January 22, 2016 . Winter Storm Summary: January 21–22, 2016 . January 28, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160128095256/http://www.srh.noaa.gov/images/lzk/pdf/win0116a.pdf . dead .
  92. News: Associated Press. KTHV. Tegna, Inc.. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. 1 fatality on Arkansas highways during storm. Little Rock, Arkansas. https://web.archive.org/web/20160123213800/http://www.thv11.com/story/news/2016/01/22/travel-treacherous-throughout-eastern-arkansas/79168620/. 2016-01-23. dead.
  93. News: Mark Berman. The Washington Post. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. Thousands of flights canceled, states of emergency declared as blizzard threatens East Coast. Washington, D.C..
  94. News: Greg Botelho . Jason Hanna . Joshua Berlinger . CNN. January 23, 2016. January 23, 2016. Blizzard strikes East Coast; motorists stranded for hours in 3 states.
  95. News: Associated Press. WKRN-TV. Media General. January 23, 2016. January 23, 2016. Millions hunker down for snowstorm; cars stuck in Kentucky. Washington, D.C.. January 24, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160124091213/http://wkrn.com/2016/01/23/tens-of-millions-hunker-down-to-ride-out-winter-storm/. dead.
  96. News: Associated Press. KTRK-TV. The Walt Disney Company. January 23, 2016. January 23, 2016. Blizzard Strikes US, Blankets Millions in Snow and Ice. Washington, D.C.. https://web.archive.org/web/20160124100337/http://abc13.com/news/at-least-6-dead-as-blizzard-blankets-us-in-snow/1171201/. 2016-01-24. dead.
  97. Web site: Anna Norris. The Weather Channel. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. Winter Storm Jonas Takes Fatal Turn in the South; Nashville Roads Gridlocked. Atlanta, Georgia.
  98. News: Associated Press. Richmond Times-Dispatch. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. Update: At least 8 snowstorm-related deaths in Ken., Tenn., N.C.. Richmond, Virginia.
  99. News: Associated Press. KSNT. NBCUniversal. January 23, 2016. January 26, 2016. More than 120,000 across N.C. without power. Raleigh, North Carolina.
  100. News: Associated Press. WJZ-TV. CBS Corporation. January 25, 2016. January 25, 2016. At Least 30 Killed In Snowstorm-Related Deaths. Baltimore, Maryland.
  101. News: The State. January 22, 2016. January 26, 2016. Update: Power outages reported in the Upstate . Columbia, South Carolina.
  102. News: Associated Press. WCIV. Sinclair Broadcast Group. January 23, 2016. January 26, 2016. Icy conditions, power outages tail off in SC after storm. Columbia, South Carolina.
  103. News: Blizzard 2016 Barrels Up East Coast With Deadly Force. Alex Johnson. Jon Schuppe. NBC News. January 24, 2016. June 21, 2021.
  104. News: Associated Press. The Augusta Chronicle. January 23, 2016. January 23, 2016. Northeast Georgia receives up to 8 inches of snow. Atlanta, Georgia.
  105. Web site: Emily Knapp. Snowstorm Deaths Reach 41 as East Coast Tries to Dig Out. January 25, 2016. ABC News. January 25, 2016.
  106. weatherchannel. The Weather Channel. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. Snow has been reported as far south as #Mobile, Alabama. Snow showers are moving across the Florida panhandle: #flwx. 690704845716611072.
  107. News: Alex Harris. Miami Herald. January 23, 2016. January 23, 2016. Snow in the Sunshine State: North Florida sees a few flakes. Miami, Florida.
  108. News: Weekly wrap-up: Blizzard of 2016 ranks 4th among worst winter storms of past 100 years . December 2, 2022 . . January 31, 2016.
  109. News: The Weather Channel. The Weather Channel. January 21, 2016. January 21, 2016. Winter Storm Jonas Forecast.
  110. News: WJLA-TV. Sinclair Broadcast Group. January 23, 2016. January 23, 2016. Man dies while shoveling snow in Maryland. Ft. Washington, Maryland.
  111. News: David Anderson. The Baltimore Sun. January 23, 2016. January 23, 2016. Two die in Harford during Saturday blizzard, snow expected to continue through the evening . Baltimore, Maryland.
  112. News: Christine Boynton. WBFF. Sinclair Broadcast Group. January 23, 2016. January 23, 2016. Ocean City fishing pier torn apart by winter storm. Ocean City, Maryland.
  113. News: Scott Wise. WTVR-TV. Tribune Media. January 25, 2016. January 25, 2016. Snowstorm blamed for 6 Virginia deaths. Richmond, Virginia.
  114. News: Associated Press. New Jersey Herald. January 23, 2016. January 23, 2016. At least 18 killed in snowstorm-related deaths.
  115. News: Michael Martz. Richmond Times-Dispatch. January 23, 2016. January 23, 2016. Roof collapses on historic Donk's Theater, known as "Virginia's Lil Ole Opry" . Richmond, Virginia.
  116. News: Associated Press. WTOP-FM. Hubbard Broadcasting. January 25, 2016. January 26, 2016. Charlottesville roof laden with snow collapses. Richmond, Virginia. https://web.archive.org/web/20160128002428/http://wtop.com/virginia/2016/01/unofficial-storm-death-toll-in-virginia-up-to-8/. 2016-01-28. dead.
  117. News: Victoria Jones. WRC-TV. NBCUniversal. January 25, 2016. January 27, 2016. Blocked Vents Cause Carbon Monoxide Poisoning at Virginia Apartments. Washington, D.C..
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  132. News: Lindsey Bever. The Washington Post. January 25, 2016. January 26, 2016. 'Everybody cry': Mom, 1-year-old killed by carbon monoxide as dad clears snow. Washington, D.C..
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  145. News: Molly Murray. The News Journal. January 25, 2016. January 27, 2016. Dunes washed away; bayshore beaches flooded. Wilmington, Delaware.
  146. News: Cathy Carter. WDDE. January 25, 2016. January 27, 2016. Delaware National Guard came to the rescue over the weekend . Dover, Delaware.
  147. News: Chris Flood. Cape Gazette. January 23, 2016. January 27, 2016. Route 1 remains closed from Dewey to Bethany.
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  149. Web site: Jon Hurdle. NJ Spotlight. January 27, 2016. January 27, 2016. Jonas highlights New Jersey's unsolved back-bay flooding problem. https://web.archive.org/web/20160131222541/http://www.newsworks.org/index.php/local/new-jersey-spotlight/90462-jonas-highlights-new-jerseys-unsolved-back-bay-flooding-problem. January 31, 2016. dead.
  150. Web site: MaryAnn Spoto. New Jersey On-Line. Advance Digital. January 27, 2016. January 27, 2016. N.J. wants feds to repair LBI beaches eroded by blizzard soon. Holgate, New Jersey.
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  154. News: . January 24, 2016 . January 26, 2016 . Snow for some Nova Scotians, not a flake for others .
  155. News: . January 26, 2016 . January 26, 2016 . Halifax bans parking on 3 streets overnight to clear snow .
  156. News: Nicole . Hensley . . January 25, 2016 . January 26, 2016 . Severe turbulence injures 7 on American Airlines flight to Milan; aircraft diverted to Newfoundland .
  157. News: WTTG. 21st Century Fox. January 26, 2016. January 26, 2016. Unplowed side-streets leave DC area residents furious. Temple Hills, Maryland. January 28, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160128203414/http://www.fox5dc.com/news/82512932-story. dead.
  158. News: WRC-TV. NBCUniversal. January 27, 2016. January 27, 2016. DC Issues $1 Million Worth of Parking Tickets After Blizzard. Washington, D.C..
  159. News: Megan McGibney . Michael Gartland . Bruce Golding . New York Post. January 25, 2016. January 26, 2016. Queens was basically forgotten during Winter Storm Jonas. New York, New York.
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  162. News: David Chang. WCAU. NBCUniversal. January 25, 2016. January 26, 2016. 'You Want Me to Go Down There With a Mop?' Christie Addresses Criticism Over His Response to Jersey Shore Flooding.
  163. News: Jordyn Phelps. ABC News. January 25, 2016. January 26, 2016. 'Want Me to Go Down There With a Mop?' Chris Christie Says About NJ Flooding Cleanup.
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  166. Web site: Federal Emergency Management Agency. March 4, 2016. April 20, 2016. President Declares Disaster for Delaware. Washington, D.C..
  167. Web site: Federal Emergency Management Agency. March 4, 2016. April 20, 2016. President Declares Disaster for State of Maryland. Washington, D.C..
  168. Web site: Federal Emergency Management Agency. March 15, 2016. April 20, 2016. President Declares Disaster for State of New Jersey. Washington, D.C..
  169. Web site: Federal Emergency Management Agency. March 23, 2016. April 20, 2016. President Declares Disaster for Pennsylvania. Washington, D.C..
  170. Web site: Federal Emergency Management Agency. March 7, 2016. April 20, 2016. President Declares Disaster for the Commonwealth of Virginia. Washington, D.C..
  171. Web site: Federal Emergency Management Agency. March 4, 2016. April 20, 2016. President Declares Disaster for District of Columbia. Washington, D.C..
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  175. News: Angela Fritz . Shawn Boburg . The Washington Post. January 24, 2016. April 28, 2016. Lower-than-expected D.C. snowfall total raises questions about its measurement.
  176. Web site: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. April 28, 2016. April 28, 2016. Review of Jan. 2016 blizzard preliminary snow totals validates DC measurement.
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  178. Chris Stachelski. National Centers for Environmental Information. May 6, 2016. August 23, 2017. SCEC Decision: New 24 Hour Snowfall Record For North Carolina. https://web.archive.org/web/20170824010415/https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/monitoring-content/extremes/scec/20160506-NorthCarolina-24-Hour-Snow-Rejected.pdf. August 24, 2017. dead.
  179. National Weather Service Office in Sterling, Virginia . . January 25, 2016 . January 26, 2016 . Public Information Statement: Spotter Reports . February 3, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160203175857/http://forecast.weather.gov/product.php?site=LWX&product=PNS&issuedby=LWX . Sterling, Virginia . dead .
  180. National Weather Service Eastern Region. NWSEastern. January 24, 2016. January 25, 2016. Final snowfall map & totals from the January 22–23, 2016 blizzard. #bilzzard2016 #nywx #njwx #pawx #mdwx #vawx #wvwx . 691339135144038400.
  181. Web site: Glengary reacts to 42-inch snowfall . . January 26, 2016 . January 28, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160206004234/http://www.journal-news.net/page/content.detail/id/650665/Glengary-reacts-to-42-inch-snowfall.html . 2016-02-06 . dead .
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  183. National Weather Service Office in Louisville, Kentucky . . January 23, 2016 . January 25, 2016 . Record Daily Maximum Snowfall Set At Bowling Green . February 2, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160202181646/http://forecast.weather.gov/product.php?site=LMK&product=RER&issuedby=LMK . dead .
  184. News: The Weather Channel. January 24, 2016. January 25, 2016. Winter Storm Jonas: Where Does it Rank Historically?. Atlanta, Georgia.
  185. News: fr. Agence France-Presse and Reuters. Le Monde. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. La côte est des Etats-Unis en alerte maximale avant l'arrivée de la tempête géante Jonas. Paris, France.
  186. BilldeBlasio. 690754553701101568. 22 January 2016. Jonas is here, NYC. Please be safe. Stay off the roads and look out for your neighbors..
  187. Web site: NY Postal Officials Preparing for Storm Jonas. Connie. Chiricello. January 22, 2016. January 23, 2016. United States Postal Service.
  188. News: Liam Stack. The New York Times. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. Meet Jonas, Part Storm, Part Marketing Ploy.
  189. News: Angela Fritz. The Washington Post. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. We hereby name this winter storm 'Snowzilla'. Washington, D.C..
  190. News: 'Snowzilla' is no 'Jonas,' but it just may make 'Make Winter Great Again' in Washington, D.C.. Newsday. Patricia Kitchen. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016.
  191. Web site: WFSB. Meredith Corporation. January 21, 2016. January 22, 2016. Weekend Storm – the latest!. Hartford, Connecticut. January 22, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160122171330/http://www.wfsb.com/story/31015194/tracking-the-potential-for-a-winter-storm-this-weekend. dead.
  192. News: Mark Weiner. The Post-Standard. January 22, 2016. January 22, 2016. As Blizzard of 2016 roars up coast, Washington, D.C. begins massive shutdown. Syracuse, New York.