September 20, 2024

Lake effect snow piles up in Buffalo: Several deaths reported, travel treacherous

Buffalo #Buffalo

Zaria Black, 24, from Buffalo, clears off her car as snow falls Friday, Nov. 18, 2022, in Buffalo, N.Y. A dangerous lake-effect snowstorm paralyzed parts of western and northern New York, with nearly 2 feet of snow already on the ground in some places and possibly much more on the way. (AP Photo/Joshua Bessex) © The Associated Press Zaria Black, 24, from Buffalo, clears off her car as snow falls Friday, Nov. 18, 2022, in Buffalo, N.Y. A dangerous lake-effect snowstorm paralyzed parts of western and northern New York, with nearly 2 feet of snow already on the ground in some places and possibly much more on the way. (AP Photo/Joshua Bessex)

Parts of northern New York state were buried under several feet of snow Saturday morning, with lake-effect snowstorms blamed for several deaths, scattered power outages and icy roads that stymied first responders as severe squalls continued to blast the area.

Storms that whipped eleven counties into a state of emergency Friday are expected to continue through Sunday, dumping as much as four feet of snow throughout the Buffalo metro area before mixing with rain on Monday, according to the National Weather Service.

The heaviest snow fell south of the city, with single-day totals ranging from three feet along the Lake Erie’s eastern end to as much as 66 inches in suburban Orchard Park, where the Buffalo Bills were scheduled to play the Cleveland Browns on Sunday. NFL officials on Thursday announced that they were moving the game to Detroit’s Ford Field because of the weather.

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Erie County executive Mark Poloncarz said in a tweet that two people had died as a result of the storm from “cardiac events related to exertion during shoveling/snow blowing.” A third person – a snowplow driver in Hamlet, Indiana, about 30 miles from Lake Michigan – was killed Friday when his plow slid off the pavement and rolled over, the Starke County Sheriff’s Department.

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Treacherous weather conditions prompted Buffalo officials to issue travel bans throughout the area. However, the Buffalo News reported as of Friday evening officers had issued more than 300 tickets to drivers who defied those bans. 

Throughout the area, a mishmash of lake-effect snowfall blanketed neighborhoods as residents dug out and hoped their rooftops wouldn’t buckle under the weight.

Lake-effect storms are created when frigid winds collect moisture from warmer lakes, forming narrow bands of clouds that dump blowing snow wherever currents may take them. The patchwork effect means some areas of Buffalo experienced heavy thundersnow, in which storms dispense snow instead of rain, while others saw more modest snowfall with patches of blue sky.

Buffalo’s National Weather Service office said that the nearly 14 inches that had fallen at Buffalo Niagara International Airport through Saturday morning meant more than 29 inches of snow had fallen there this month, making it — so far — the third snowiest November on record. The snowiest was 45.6 inches in 2000, the office said.

Photos posted by the Buffalo Bills on social media showed Highmark Stadium and its more than 60,000 seats virtually buried in snow.

Scott Fleetwood of West Seneca captured video of lightning crashing outside his home throughout the night, as well as snow swiftly burying the pumpkins on his porch.

“The sky is white…. Everything’s white. The only thing you can see really is the house across the street,” he said. “My tiki bar is now an igloo.”

Buffalo has experience with dramatic lake-effect snowstorms, few worse than the one that struck in November 2014. That epic storm dumped 7 feet of snow on some communities over three days, collapsing roofs and trapping motorists in more than 100 vehicles on a lakeside stretch of the New York State Thruway.

Gov. Kathy Hochul declared a state of emergency Thursday for parts of western New York, including communities along the eastern ends of Lake Erie and Lake Ontario. The declaration covers 11 counties, with all vehicles banned from a stretch of Interstate 90.

Contributing: Ashley R. Williams and Doyle Rice USA TODAY; The Associated Press.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Parts of Buffalo area buried under feet of snow: Storm blamed for 3 deaths; driving treacherous

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