- 36inches of snow expected across Northeast, with winds topping 55mph in New York City and 75mph on the coast
- New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island governors declared states of emergency
- National Guard is on standby in New York and 500 guardsmen have been deployed in Massachusetts
- Up to 100,000 people could lose power in Connecticut and could last a few days
- Officials were urging people to head home as soon as possible for their own safety leading to chaos on city transit
- All mass transit, including the subway, will close from 11pm and all non-emergency vehicles will be banned from roads
- Authorities said that violating the road ban could bring misdemeanor charges, a $300 fine and even get you arrested
- NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio said: 'This will be one of the largest blizzards in the history of New York City. People must be prepared. This is not business as usual'
- Predictions say visibility on roads will be zero Monday night as 2-4 inches of snow fall per hour
- More than 3,800 flights canceled on Monday, with JFK, LaGuardia and Newark airports virtually closed this evening
- The National Weather Service has issued a severe weather warning which affects 60 million people
Five
 states declared a state of emergency on Monday as the Northeast braced 
for a 'crippling and potentially historic' storm that could bury 
communities from northern New Jersey to southern Maine in up to 3 feet 
of snow and batter areas with hurricane-strength winds.
New
 York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island governors
 were taking no chances as winter storm Juno was set to dump snow at the
 rate of several inches per hour along with bringing winds up 80mph in 
some regions and creating whiteout conditions that were being described 
as 'life-threatening', by the National Weather Service. 
The
 storm will affect a 250-mile stretch, including New York City, 
Philadelphia and Boston, affecting close to 60 million people across 
seven states. Widespread coastal flooding was expected to affect up to 
11 million people starting on Monday afternoon.
Authorities
 issued a sweeping travel ban effective from 11pm Monday, banishing all 
except emergency vehicles from the streets of New York City and the 
surrounding counties, with the threat of $300 fines for violators. 
Public transit was also canceled for the night, with no clear sign of 
when roads and services would start up again.
Airlines
 were shutting down operations along the East Coast - with more than 
6,000 flights canceled over the next two days, and the three major New 
York City airports virtually closed.
On
 Monday, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo and New Jersey Governor Chris 
Christie declared states of emergencies. Governor Christie said: 'This 
is a different kind of storm than we've had before.'
New
 York Mayor Bill de Blasio added: 'This will be one of the largest 
blizzards in the history of New York City. People must be prepared. This
 is not business as usual... Prepare for something worse than we have 
seen before.'
He
 urged people to get off the streets as quickly as possible in the next 
few hours, adding: 'This is going to hit very hard and very fast.'  As 
of Monday afternoon, a quarter of an inch of snow was coming down every 
ten minutes, according to weather experts. 
 
Deserted: As the storm set in, hardly 
any cars were on the streets in Manhattan. The coming snow - as much as 
three feet - as prompted a total travel ban from city authorities
 
Snow central: A tourist poses in Times Square, which is being struck by the potentially historic storm in New York City
 
Frozen city: A lone man walks in front
 of the Statue of Liberty, which was obscured by the vicious blizzard. 
Forecasters say it could dump three feet of snow on the metropolis
 
Getting to work: A man starts shoveling snow from the streets in Brooklyn. Much more is set to follow
 
Bustling home: Pedestrians in midtown Manhattan push down the street in the hope of escaping the bad weather 
 
Blowing in: The storm is seen above from space at 5.45pm New York time. The worst has not yet hit
 
Worth a shot: This snow blower made 
some progress cleaning the street in front of Grand Central Station's 
Lexington Avenue entrance - but the flurries were set to intensify 
overnight
 
Frozen sardines: Commuters in this New York City train station were crammed in as the 11pm transport deadline drew nearer
 
Piling up: Pedestrians hurried through
 the streets as snow piled up around them - amid authorities warning of a
 state of emergency
 
Mechanical: One of thousands of snow 
blowers in the city is pushed down normally-busy Lexington Avenue. The 
worst snow is expected Monday night
 
No fun on the way home: The Hudson 
railway line out of New York, pictured above, was also a victim of the 
snow. All trains were set to close at 11pm
 
Quiet: The ice rink in lower Central 
Park was clear of skaters tonight as everyone was warned to avoid all 
non-essential outdoor activity
 
Massachusetts: Cambridge, next to 
Boston, is pictured above under a blanket of snow as the storm advances 
up the East Coast to envelop other cities
 
Snow trudge: A man makes his way 
across Boston Common, which had a light dusting of snow Monday evening 
ahead of the predicted big showers
 
Starting up: New Englanders in Boston's Back Bay wrapped up as the snow began there Monday afternoon
 
Frosted: A man walks through the 
driving snow on the Brooklyn Bridge Monday afternoon. Mass transit will 
be closed tonight, and vehicles banned from the streets as of 11pm
 
Struggling on: This scene in Manhattan was typical during the initial flurries of the storm on Monday afternoon
 
Silent city: Many roads were emptied 
and sidewalks deserted as the snow continued to fall. Pictured above is 
the west side of the city, shown by Instagram user Mike Zorger from the 
World Trade Center
 
Storm front: This satellite image shows the winter storm advancing on the East Coast as of 9.15am local time
 
Rolling in: This radar map shows the 
progress of the storm over the East Coast at 6.15pm with the most 
intense parts still over the Atlantic
 
Widespread: A cyclist in New London, 
Connecticut, waits at a snow-covered intersection Monday evening. The 
state, along with New York, Rhode Island, Massachusetts and New Jersey, 
is in a state of emergency
 
People wait for their train platform 
to be announced at Penn Station in New York as a major snowstorm set in.
 Travel officials said that they would be running a schedule like 
Thanksgiving Eve to get everyone home before the worst of the snow hit
 
The snow flurries were increasing in 
New York City on Monday with officials urging people to stock up on food
 and water and head home early
 
Get off the roads: New York governor Andrew Cuomo banned all non-emergency vehicles from the roads, effective from 11pm Monday
 
Keeping it clear: A well-protected cleaner takes his snow blower to the streets in Foley Square, downtown Manhattan
 
One way to get around: A man in Brooklyn's Prospect Park gives his skis a rare city outing
 
Cold eagle: This ornate decoration 
outside Manhattan's Grand Central Station gained an extra coating of 
white as the afternoon wore on
 
Prepping up: A loader gets ready to stack up salt and gravel in Atlantic County, New Jersey, ahead of the snowfall
 
Heavy surf pounds the shoreline on 
Monday where a boardwalk once stood before it was damaged by Hurricane 
Sandy in 2012. Coastal areas were bracing for high waves and 
hurricane-strength winds heading into tonight
 
Snow predictions as of Monday 
afternoon revealed that several feet was going to blanket the Northeast 
along with high winds which would create 'life-threatening' whiteout 
conditions, according to the National Weather Service
 
Here it comes! New York was bracing 
for a severe snowstorm which was set to begin around noon on Monday and 
could drop up to two feet on the city and bring hurricane-strength 
winds. A state of emergency was announced by Governor Cuomo today
 
New Yorkers walk through the snowfall 
as it began to get heavy on Monday  as Mayor Bill de Blasio warned 
residents to get off the streets
 
 
New Yorkers were piling their grocery carts high on Monday afternoon as they headed home to bunker down ahead of this storm 
 
Whole lot of people: This Whole Foods 
store in Manhattan was dealing with a tide of shoppers desperate to 
stock up before the snow hit
 
Not promising: A passenger at LaGuardia airport looks at arrival and departures boards racked by cancellations
 
 
Busy times: Trader Joe's near Union Square , right, had lines out the door, so fierce was the panic-buying
 
Bagel chips and pasta sauce it is, 
then: This Gristedes store had precious little to offer shoppers Monday 
night after panic-buyers took everything
All
 vehicle traffic has been banned from the streets of New York City 
starting at 11pm, with mass transit closed then as well. Subways and 
buses will switch to local-only service from 8pm, while only emergency 
vehicles will be allowed on the streets in New York City and surrounding
 counties as of 11pm.
Experts
 warned that the snow, which started in earnest in New York around 2pm, 
would be most intense from 11pm, with four inches an hour falling, 
frustrating the efforts of snow plows to keep the roads clear.
Even
 pedestrians were warned against leaving buildings. In a 7pm update on 
the storm, de Blasio said: 'It's gonna drastically change at 11, 12 
o'clock. We've got to press the point - it's going to be dangerous, 
especially dangerous to drive and walk. 
'You're
 going to see it's going to be very difficult to be outside. I don't 
want to see anybody outside that doesn't absolutely need to be outside.'
Winds
 topping 55 miles per hour (88 kmph) were predicted to lash New York 
City and its suburbs, raising the potential for power outages caused by 
tree limbs falling on overhead utility lines. 
On
 Monday, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo warned that residents should not
 take the snowstorm lightly, adding: 'The snow combined with the wind 
makes it dangerous and difficult conditions'
New
 York City was likely to see 'thundersnow' - when snow collides with the
 dry air, resulting in lightning strikes and rolling thunder.
On
 Monday, Governor of Connecticut Dannel Malloy issued a statewide travel
 ban from 9pm this evening where 12-18 inches of snow was expected and 
closed schools on Tuesday. 
NJ
 Governor Christie urged people to stay off the roads unless in absolute
 necessity and, in particular, when the worst conditions hit at 9pm on 
Monday. 
The
 National Weather Service said roads throughout the Mid-Atlantic would 
be slippery and visibilities could be reduced to a quarter-mile at 
times. 
Chaos
 engulfed the city as shoppers, with recent memories of Hurricane Sandy 
in October 2012, formed long lines and emptied grocery store shelves in 
preparation.
There
 would be zero visibility on roads overnight on Monday, forecasters 
warned, with drivers urged to take the utmost care and avoid journeys 
where possible.
Governor Cuomo said on Monday that the subway would run until 7-8pm as normal, then be on a reduced service. 
At 11pm tonight, the MTA subway system would shut down along with Port Authority facilities. 
As of early on Monday afternoon, The Long Island Rail Road and Metro North were set to close at 11pm.  
 
People were reporting packed out 
trains on the Long Island Rail Road where trains would be running a 
reduced service later on Monday night
 
Struggle: Commuters piled on to subway lines, many of which were delayed, and all of which were due to shut in the evening
 
Busy: This station was crammed with those desperate to get home - even before the shutdown of public transit had begun
 
Fleeing the city: Commuters piled into
 Grand Central Terminal in the hope of catching a train before services 
ended earlier than usual
 
Serious gear: This New York state trooper took to a snowmobile to respond to the declared state of emergency
 
Karen Barker, center right, and her 
daughter, Grace Barker, 13, wait in line to see if they will be able to 
board a rescheduled flight to Texas at LaGuardia Airport in New York
 
Maybe don't come fly with me: The 
departures lounge at JFK had barely anyone there this afternoon after 
hundreds of flights were axed
 
Snow removal equipment sits on the 
tarmac at Logan Airport in Boston, Massachusetts ahead of a major winter
 storm predicted to hit the area later in the day
Metro-North will run an early getaway schedule as it does on Thanksgiving Eve, according to travel authorities.
Tractor-trailer bans were being issued on major roads in New York from 4pm, Governor Cuomo said. 
Some
 2,400 sanitation workers were planned to work back-to-back in 12 hours 
shifts, using 750 snow plows and tons of salt for the massive cleanup on
 about 6,000 miles of city streets - the equivalent of New York to LA 
and back again. 
Most
 non-essential state employees were being sent home at 3pm on Monday in 
affected areas as private offices emptied out, with the majority of 
companies taking the severe weather warnings seriously.
All Broadway performances were canceled on Monday night in New York City.
Monday
 night home games were postponed for the New York Knicks and Brooklyn 
Nets while comedian Louis C.K. nixed his final show set for Tuesday at 
Madison Square Garden.
The
 UN headquarters gave itself a day off on Tuesday and schools across the
 East Coast dismissed students early on Monday and canceled classes for 
Tuesday, with those in Boston staying closed until Thursday. 
 
States of emergency have been declared
 in five states as authorities warned people to get off the streets 
ahead of the massive storm hitting the Northeast
 
Commuters in New York were being urged
 to head home early as mass transit planned to run on reduced schedules 
during the worst of the storm on Monday night 
In
 New York City, the Greater New York Taxi Association offered free cab 
service for emergency responders trying to get to work, and disabled and
 elderly residents who become stranded. 
Government
 officials began to activate emergency centers on Sunday as professional
 sports teams, schools and utilities hastily revised their schedules and
 made preparations. 
New York schools were open on Monday but expected to be closed on Tuesday, according to the mayor.  
The
 Super Bowl-bound New England Patriots expected to be out of town by the
 time the storm arrives in Boston. The team plans to leave Logan Airport
 at 12.30pm on Monday for Phoenix, Arizona. where the temperature will 
reach the high 60s. 
In
 Massachusetts, Governor Charlie Baker warned residents to prepare for 
roads that are 'very hard, if not impossible, to navigate,' power 
outages and possibly even a lack of public transportation. 
Cape
 Cod was expected to see up to three feet of snow with all weather 
models showing at least two feet of snow across Hartford, Connecticut, 
Providence, Rhode Island, and Boston along with 50mph winds which will 
make travel treacherous. 
 
People walk along a Manhattan street 
in heavy snow as the city braced for a forecast 24 inches of snow 
overnight on Monday, leaving the city with treacherous conditions. Stay 
home, has been the strongly-worded advice from the city's mayor
 
Workers de-ice a plane during a light 
snow on the runway at LaGuardia Airport in New York early on Monday. 
Airlines cancelled thousands of flights into and out of East Coast 
airports
 
A plow truck clears snow off South 
Church Street, in Hazleton, Pennsylvania on Monday. The area received 
another three-inches of snow overnight
 
A plow travels down a city street 
during heavy snow in the financial district of Manhattan - the streets 
were quiet as most offices allowed employees to go home early for their 
own safety
 
 
Chaos: 
Pictured left, traffic jams were backing up on Central Parkway, Queens 
near New York's La Guardia airport while thousands of travelers were 
stranded (picture at La Guardia on Monday) after airlines canceled more 
than 5,000 flights
Widespread power outages were expected and could last days, authorities across New England warned.
An
 early accident between a car and a snow plow was reported on Monday 
morning in Haverford Township, Pennsylvania, according to ABC. 
A
 tractor-trailer jackknifed, and a beer truck a;so crashed into the 
median on Interstate 81 near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, during the 
morning commute. No injuries were reported. 
Some
 of the occupants of the car were pinned inside and had to be cut free 
after the vehicle hit the snow plow's wheel around 6.15am. Their 
injuries were unknown at this time.    
The 
storm was blasting its way up the Atlantic coast and would dump huge 
quantities of snow from Washington, D.C., to Maine, with New York City 
and the surrounding areas hardest-hit.
At
 the same time, New York City was set to face hurricane-strength winds 
topping 55mph. The Weather Channel predicted that gusts could reach up 
to 75mph in Montauk, Long Island.
New
 York Governor Cuomo said: 'I urge residents to put safety first and 
plan ahead to protect themselves and others throughout the duration of 
this snowstorm.'
Many
 New Yorkers reacted to the abysmal weather predictions - which could 
bring the worst storm since records began in 1872 - by cleaning out 
their local grocery stores.
Shoppers
 were pictured lining up around the block in Manhattan just to get 
inside so they could grab hold of rapidly-diminishing supplies.
The New York City-area airports were set to be especially hard-hit by the weather. 
 
Deserted: An abnormally quiet Newark 
Airport in New Jersey on Monday morning as hundreds of arriving and 
departing flights had already been canceled
 
The Massachusetts governor declared a 
state of emergency and warned people to stay off the roads to avoid 
accidents, as seen here on Monday in Southborough
According to the FlightAware monitoring
 service, just short of 4,000 services have been canceled on Monday, 
with LaGuardia, Newark Liberty and JFK airports the worst affected.
FlightAware
 said around 70 per cent of all inbound flights to those three hubs were
 cancelled tomorrow. Newark canceled 89 per cent of its departing 
flights as well, with LaGuardia scrapping more than three-quarters of 
theirs. Atlantic City airport in New Jersey was also reporting a huge 
number of cancellations. 
New
 Jersey and New England were under severe weather warnings with 
authorities telling residents to avoid making long journeys in 
life-threatening conditions.
The National Weather Service in Boston said that 'travel may become impossible'. 
New
 York City's current record for snowfall is 26.9inches in February 2006.
 The most extreme predictions for the coming storm exceed that by almost
 ten inches.  
'This
 could be a storm the likes of which we have never seen before,' New 
York City Mayor Bill de Blasio at a news conference Sunday. 
'Don't underestimate this storm. Prepare for the worst,' he said as he urged residents to plan to leave work early Monday.
Boston
 is expected to get 18 to 24 inches of snow, with up to 2 feet or more 
west of the city, and Philadelphia could see up to a foot, the weather 
service said. 
The Washington area expected only a couple of inches, with steadily increasing amounts as the storm heads north. 
'We
 do anticipate very heavy snowfall totals,' said Bob Oravec, lead 
forecaster with the weather service in College Park, Maryland. 
'In
 addition to heavy snow, with blizzard warnings, there's a big threat of
 high, damaging winds, and that will be increasing Monday into Tuesday. A
 lot of blowing, drifting and such.'
Wind gusts of 75 mph or more are possible for coastal areas of Massachusetts, and up to 50 mph further inland, Oravec said. 
Towns
 along New Jersey’s coast were expected to be the hardest hit by the 
storm, and Jersey shore communities were watching out for flooding. 
The storm was expected to cause moderate flooding in oceanfront communities between midnight and 1am on Tuesday. 
Back
 bay areas tend to flood several hours after the oceanfront high tide. 
The weather service says some property damage could occur, and tides and
 wave action will cause severe beach erosion.
Parts
 of the shore that were hit hard by Superstorm Sandy now have man-made 
dunes, rocks or metal walls. But other cities still have not agreed to 
protective dunes, and some are fighting the state’s plans for them in 
court. 
The
 weekend storm which brought snow and slush to the Northeast - the first
 real snow of the season for many areas - was just a warm up. The storm 
promised treacherous travel by both land and air along the busy 
northeast corridor.
Preparations
 large and small were in effect  in New York City. A Manhattan Home 
Depot store sold about twice as many shovels over the weekend as it 
normally does.
Transit
 officials hoping to keep the subways running smoothly planned to use 
modified subway cars loaded with de-icing fluid to spray the third rail 
that powers trains.
Farther
 north, a blizzard watch is in effect for Boston from Monday night 
through early Wednesday. Wind gusts of 60 mph or more are possible on 
Cape Cod, forecasters said.  
Wyatt
 Baars, manager of the Charlestown Ace Hardware in Boston, sold out of 
his bags of ice-melting pellets but said a New Hampshire distributor was
 delivering more. 
'Everybody
 is preparing for the storm,' he said. 'When we have something this big 
on the horizon, everybody comes in for the ice melt, snow shovels, snow 
brooms.'
Snow
 plow driver Al Laplant expected to be out clearing roads of Simsbury, 
Connecticut from Monday, just as he has been doing for more than two 
decades.
'We'll
 be out there until the storm's over and then at least three hours after
 cleaning up,' he said as he attended a home show in Hartford. 'We'll be
 out there through the whole storm.'
But even for a plow driver, the snow is no cake walk.
'It's
 kind of exhilarating,' he said. 'But at the same time, I've been doing 
it for 27 years, so I'm kind of tired of it myself.' 
 
People wrap up warm for a chilly walk 
in Central Park in Manhattan, New York ahead of the approaching blizzard
 on Monday afternoon 
 
 
A cyclist 
navigates between a New York Dept. of Sanitation truck with a snow plow 
attached, and cars on New York's Sixth Avenue (left). Street cleaner 
Francisco Mathurine clears snow from the steps in Times Square on Monday
 
 
Stockpiling:
 Shelves were emptied of produce in New York City on Monday as queues at
 the grocery stores grew to hundreds of people 
 
A worker in the Northeast stands on 
top of a huge stockpile of salt as authorities were taking no chances 
with forecasts of a severe storm
  Read more:
  
- Mayor de Blasio Delivers Special Weather Update - YouTube
- Transit could close as blizzard set to blanket New York - NY Daily News
- Snow plow, car collide in Haverford Township | 6abc.com
- Live Airline Flight Cancellations Info & Statistics ✈ FlightAware





 
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