Blizzard cancels thousands of flights as NYC braces for 18 to 22 inches of snow


New estimates are forecasting New York City might see nearly two feet of snow, as the five boroughs brace for a blizzard that could rival the record books.

The storm will start with light snow at first but the squall will “worsen rapidly,” with the severe weather hitting about 9 p.m. Sunday and persisting until 9 a.m. Monday, city Office of Emergency Management officials predicted Sunday.

“Snowfall rates could reach 2 to 3 inches per hour, with total accumulations of 18 to 22 inches and higher totals possible in heavy snow bands,” Emergency Management officials posted on X. “Wind gusts up to 55 mph will create blowing and drifting snow, whiteout conditions, and severe travel hazards. Moderate coastal flooding is also expected during high tide in vulnerable areas.”

On Saturday, many forecasters had been predicting 13 to 17 inches of accumulation, but by Sunday the storm was looking even more severe.

Nearly 2,200 outgoing and incoming flights had been cancelled at JFK, LaGuardia and Newark Airports by late Sunday morning, according to the flight tracking website FlightAware.com.

A snow plow sits ready on Delancey St. on the Lower East Side Sunday as a Nor’easter was predicted to pummel New York City. (Theodore Parisienne / New York Daily News)

The National Weather Service on Saturday issued a blizzard warning across all five boroughs, as well as for Long Island, the Lower Hudson Valley, southern Connecticut and much of New Jersey. New York City last saw a blizzard warning in 2017.

On Sunday morning, Mayor Mamdani warned of a possible 18 to 22 inches of snow, announced that homeless outreach teams would be “working 24/7,” and that the Sanitation Department would be “ready to take on the snow.”

Mamdani took heat for his management of a historic cold snap and Jan. 25 snowstorm. Eighteen New Yorkers died outside amid questions about his decision to end Adams-era homeless encampment sweeps. Garbage piled up on city streets and several bus stops were blocked by piles of snow days after the storm.

Sunday’s snowfall could rank among the city’s biggest snowstorms in the past century and a half. Central Park saw a record-breaking 27.5 inches of snow in January 2016, topping the previous 26.9-inch record set in February 2006. Before that, Central Park saw 26.4 inches in a post-Christmas storm in 1947.



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