Upstate NY gets its first widespread snowstorm of the season

Syracuse.com

Syracuse, N.Y. — Roads across Upstate New York are already getting slippery as the season’s first widespread snowstorm arrives as forecast.
Nearly all of Upstate is under a winter weather advisory, a mid-level alert calling for 3 to 6 inches of snow across much of the region.
“A strengthening coastal storm will bring a widespread moderate to heavy snowfall across the region today through this evening,” the National Weather Service said.
This storm won’t be as intense as the record-breaking lake effect storm that hit on Thanksgiving Day and Black Friday, but its effects will be more widespread.
For many areas of Upstate outside of the traditional lake effect snow belts, this will be the first snowfall of the season.

Syracuse, N. Yes. — Roads across Upstate New York are already getting slippery as the season’s first widespread snowstorm arrives as forecast.

Due to the weather, several school districts, including Syracuse, will be closed today.

Snow started falling early this morning and is expected to continue through early evening. There could be heavy snowfall, sometimes falling at a rate of one inch per hour.

Nearly all of Upstate is under a winter weather advisory, a mid-level alert calling for 3 to 6 inches of snow across much of the region. A foot or more of snow could fall on hilltops and along Lake Erie and Lake Ontario.

The National Weather Service stated that “a widespread moderate to heavy snowfall across the region today through this evening will be brought by a strengthening coastal storm.”.

This storm won’t be as intense as the record-breaking lake effect storm that hit on Thanksgiving Day and Black Friday, but its effects will be more widespread. This will be the first snowfall of the season in many parts of Upstate that are not in the typical lake effect snow belts.

“Plan on slippery road conditions,” the advisory says. “The hazardous conditions could impact the Tuesday morning and evening commutes. ”.

The snow will wind down from west to east, ending in the Finger Lakes by lunchtime and persisting in the Mohawk Valley until late afternoon.

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