A
fast-moving cold front will plunge the U.S. Midwest into a deep freeze on
Tuesday and dump up to a foot (30 cm) of snow on parts of the East Coast,
forecasters said.
In
Washington, federal government offices were closed, the Office of Personnel
Management said in an early morning email. There was no precipitation in the
capital at the start of the morning rush hour.
Meanwhile,
nearly 2000 flights in the United States had been cancelled by early Tuesday,
according to Flight Aware, a tracking service.
The
cold front will drop temperatures below freezing as far south as northern
Florida. The high in and around Minnesota and the St. Lawrence Valley will not
top zero Fahrenheit (-18 Celsius) during Tuesday’s daylight hours, forecaster
AccuWeather said.
“Travel
conditions will deteriorate with slippery roads and flight delays expected to
unfold even in areas that avoid heavy snow,” AccuWeather said.
The
cold front across the eastern half of the country could drop up to 2 inches (5
cm) of snow from the Dakotas to the Ohio Valley. The snow will increase as the
cold air picks up moisture near the Atlantic coast, AccuWeather said.
The
mountains of Virginia and West Virginia will likely get up to 6 inches (15 cm)
of snow. Other sites near the mid-Atlantic and southeastern New England coast
could get 6 to 12 inches (15 to 30 cm) through late Tuesday.
For
parts of the region, the snow could be the heaviest of the winter. Washington
could see the most snow since January 2011, when about 5 inches (12.7 cm) fell,
AccuWeather said.
Baltimore
officials, expecting up to ten inches of snow in central and southern Maryland,
on Tuesday issued a Code Blue alert for potentially dangerous conditions,
according to the Baltimore Sun newspaper.
Philadelphia
was expecting five to 10 inches of snow, with wind chills in the Poconos
mountains dipping down to an icy -4 Farenheit (-20 Celsius), according to local
CBS News station KYW-TV.
The
National Weather Service said the cold air would produce snow downwind from the
Great Lakes.
The
polar front will be something of a repeat of the cold snap that gripped much of
the United States at the start of the year. Cold and snow snarled air and road
travel, shattered temperature records and contributed to at least nine deaths.
In
the middle of the cold front on Monday, Grand Marais, Minnesota, recorded -17F
(-27C), the lowest temperature in the United States outside Alaska, the weather
service said.
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