(CNN) -- A potentially historic winter storm was closing in on New England on
Friday with tens of millions of people in its sights. The storm has canceled
thousands of flights and could bring 2 feet of snow to cities like Boston.
The icy rage will commence Friday afternoon, the National Weather Service
predicts, and will last into Saturday.
Snow could lock some residents indoors over the weekend.
In addition, it will produce high winds and stir up trouble at sea, pushing
ocean waves onto land and flooding New England coastlines.
"It's going to be one of the strongest winter storms we've seen in a very
long time," CNN meteorologist Pedram Javaheri said.
But by early next week, much of the Northeast will probably re-emerge from
underneath the white blanket, Javaheri said, as temperatures in many places are
expected to go above 40 degrees.
The gathering snowstorm is driving droves of New Englanders into shops to
gather supplies, then dash home to stock their cupboards, batten down the
hatches and brace for possible record-breaking snow.
When Reading, Massachusetts, resident Elizabeth Frazier stocked up on
supplies late Thursday, shoppers were buying up the store. She grabbed the last
bottles of water in sight.
"It's a zoo in there," she said. "There's nothing left on the shelves," she
told CNN affiliate WHDH.
Motorists lined up to fill their tanks at gas stations in New York,
Connecticut and Massachusetts.
Who is in its path
The storm is on a trajectory reminiscent of the path that Superstorm Sandy
took but will also include areas farther north.
It is poised to deliver harsh blows to regions that already took a lot of
punishment in the fall.
The blizzard is predicted to smother some places where the superstorm left
behind the deepest scars -- from the New Jersey shoreline through the boroughs
of New York City and throughout Connecticut.
Forecasts call for the worst snowfall to extend into eastern Massachusetts
and reach up the Northeast shoreline into Maine.
The area is very densely populated.
Power companies and public works are shoring up their resources, and some
states have closed public schools.
The National Weather Service has predicted widespread white-out conditions
that will impede drivers' visibility.
Airlines have already canceled more than 3,200 flights to and from the
affected region, and Amtrak has canceled many trips in the Northeast corridor.
Some states are warning motorists not to drive once the storm hits.
Passengers filed into New York's La Guardia Airport on Friday before dawn to
flee the coming mayhem. Many rescheduled their flights to leave before its
arrival.
James Rubino was originally booked on a flight to Miami on Friday evening to
see family, but the airline canceled the trip. After hours of calling the
airline, he was able to get on a much earlier flight.
"I got up at 3:02 a.m. and just ran, got my son, and we were out the door,"
Rubino said. He plunked down $200 for a cab to the airport to make the new
flight on time.
The Great Blizzard of 1978 in Boston
Boston's public works filled trucks with sand Thursday to spread on roads,
and deployed snowplows and 600 snow removers.
"We are hardy New Englanders," said Boston Mayor Thomas Menino, "and used to
these types of storms."
But the city could see flakes falling at a rate of 2 to 3 inches per hour,
and the storm has already drawn comparisons to the Great Blizzard of 1978, when
thousands were stranded as fast-moving snowdrifts blanketed highways and left
several people dead.
Putting toughness aside, Menino told Bostonians to "use common sense" and
"stay off the streets of our city." "Basically, stay home."
"All vehicles must be off the roads by noon on Friday," Massachusetts'
emergency management agency said. "Boston's public rail system will halt service
at 3:30 p.m."
This storm is predicted to dump about 29 inches on Boston in one day. The
Great Blizzard dumped 27 inches on its worst day, Javaheri said, but it hovered
over the area longer than this storm is expected to.
In addition, "the winds are going to be howling," he said. The snow won't
fall down but blow in sideways, causing particularly high drifts.
The most severe weather is expected to hit Massachusetts between 2 and 5 p.m.
Friday.
Snow flurries had already begun over Massachusetts and New Hampshire on
Thursday.
Snow will be widespread and deep
The rest of New England will see heavy snow into Saturday, the National
Weather Service said, which could reach blizzard intensity in places. A wet
system rising from the Gulf Coast is colliding with a polar front rolling in
from the Midwest to produce the whopping winter storm.
Residents from New Jersey to Maine probably will be digging themselves out of
a foot or so of snow, the National Weather Service predicts, with more than 2½
feet falling in some spots.
Snowfalls could last as long as 36 hours in some areas, breaking local
accumulation records. The weather service expects the storm to fling heavy snow
across the Great Lakes as far away as Michigan and Wisconsin.
In New York, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said the timing of the storm could be
worse for municipal workers.
"If it's going to happen, having it happen Friday overnight into Saturday is
probably as good timing as we could have," he said. "The sanitation department
then has the advantage of being able to clean the streets when there's normally
less traffic."
Wind-whipped shores
In shades of Sandy, gales will whip up waves along the Atlantic Coast,
triggering small-craft advisories as far south as Georgia, the National Weather
Service said. Hurricane-force winds are predicted to churn up offshore maritime
tempests -- particularly from New Jersey to Massachusetts -- with waves cresting
at up to 30 feet at the height of the storm.
Coastal flooding is possible "from Boston northward," the weather service
said. But on Long Island, power companies are also warning that the Atlantic's
waters could come ashore there, too.
The combination of snow and gusts as high as 60 to 75 mph will also knock out
electric power, the National Weather Service said.
After Superstorm Sandy left much of Long Island without power for days, power
company National Grid is working to prevent a second act to that tragedy.
It is adding hundreds of extra crew members to more than 500 linemen already
on site for the Long Island Power Authority.
The storm could cut power to more than 100,000 customers on Long Island
alone, National Grid said.