Snowstorms from Chicago to New York City are on the way in the second half of January, says AccuWeather, warning that lingering colder temperatures will help generate he white stuff.
Portions of the Great Lakes, Appalachians, and central and northern New England will get hit by multiple storms that will make travel challenging over that period, said
AccuWeather.
"If we look at the overall pattern, there is likely to be a major storm or two with a chance at bringing substantial accumulating snow to portions of the Ohio Valley, I-95 corridor of the mid-Atlantic and southern New England during the third and fourth week of the month," said Paul Pastelok, AccuWeather's chief long-range meteorologist.
Pastelok said that while the temperatures will not become bitterly cold, it will be cold enough to bring more snow to the regions.
"We expect temperatures to settle near average during late January in the Midwest and much of the East, which is cold enough for snow."
Memories of central New York state's warm December were put aside as the region's first big snowstorm rolled in Tuesday, according to
Syracuse.com, and snowfall could reach up to 18 inches in Onondaga County. Bigger snow totals could come north of the county.
That storm made travel difficult in the area, according to social media reports.
The National Weather Service tweeted that heavy snow will continue Wednesday from Maine and the Great Lakes.
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