Venezuela Star
VenezuelaStar.com Friday 12th March 2010 Volume 8/071
  • More World News

  • Five blasts shake Lahore after two suicide bombings
  • Five successive blasts rip through Lahore
  • Fourth blast hits Lahore market
  • Third blast rips a market in Lahore, 4 injured
  • Follow laws or face consequences, China tells Google
  • Sarkozy dusts off rumours of marriage strain
  • Robbie Williams offers Mark Owen his house as getaway
  • British Airways cabin crews to begin strike next week
  • Manmohan Singh to get World Statesman award
  • Hoffman to don director's hat for comedy
  • Pakistan tests missiles, torpedoes in Arabian Sea
  • Pakistan announce Twenty20 squad, captain to be named later
    Get World News headlines emailed to you daily.

    Snowed-in Washington braces for a second wallop
    Venezuela Star
    Tuesday 9th February, 2010  
    (IANS)


    Still recovering from the 'historic mess' left from the weekend's record blizzard, Washingtonians Tuesday braced for a second wallop that could pile up 10 to 20 more inches of snow in the national capital region. About 80,000 people across the US were without power Saturday.

    As the mid-Atlantic region continued digging out Monday, the National Weather Service issued a winter storm warning, with predictions of another 10 to 20 inches of snow for the area beginning Tuesday afternoon and continuing through Wednesday.

    'A winter storm warning means significant amounts of snow are expected or occurring,' said the statement from the weather service facility in Sterling, Virginia. 'The combination of snow and strong winds will make travel very hazardous.'

    The new storm expected to hit other big cities along the East Coast, including Baltimore and Philadelphia, and extending into New Jersey and New York, would be the third major snowfall to hit the region in just over seven weeks.

    In last weekend's blizzard, a record 32.4 inches of snow fell on Washington's Dulles International Airport over two days, breaking a Jan 7-8, 1996, record of 23.2 inches, according to CNN.

    With another storm looming large, Federal government agencies in the capital region except emergency services will remain closed for a second day Tuesday. Many schools and businesses in the region too would remain shut.

    Bus service on Monday was limited to just a small number of routes in the Washington, DC area and the region's metro trains only to the underground portion of the system.

    Crews worked around the clock to clear roads and repair power lines, warning that it might take days to restore electricity to some customers from Pennsylvania to Virginia.

    Many residents who spent the weekend gleefully making snowmen and hurling snowballs grumbled at the prospect of more snow as they painfully shovelled hip-high snow from parking lots and driveways. Residents in many areas trudged along slushy roads to replenish supplies as the prospects of staying cooped up at home for several days loomed large.

    Washington's Dulles International Airport reopened to limited service Sunday but asked travellers not to arrive at the airport without confirmed flights.

    Amtrak said it cancelled several trains Sunday after downed trees and power lines fell on its tracks. Dozens of Greyhound routes in Middle Atlantic States also were cancelled, the company said on its website.

    (Arun Kumar can be contacted at arun.kumar@ians.in)

      Email this story to a friend

    Have your say on this story

    Your nickname (optional)
    Message