People of New England dig out

Snowstorm leaves thousands in dark

Susan Young snaps photos of the tree in her front yard that lost a large limb landing near her home on Simpson Lane in Montville, Conn., Friday, Feb. 5, 2016.
Susan Young snaps photos of the tree in her front yard that lost a large limb landing near her home on Simpson Lane in Montville, Conn., Friday, Feb. 5, 2016.

BOSTON -- New England is digging out from its first big snowfall of the season that dumped more than a foot in some places and left tens of thousands of homes and businesses without power, as forecasters eye another potential winter storm early this week.

By early Saturday, the lights started to come back on for some customers. Utility Eversource reported about 20,000 without electricity in Connecticut, National Grid reported about 21,000 customers without electricity in Rhode Island and the two major utilities in Massachusetts reported about 80,000 combined.

Many school districts across the region closed for the day on Friday.

There were numerous accidents and spinouts on New England highways due to the heavy snow. In New York City, a crane being taken down because of windy conditions collapsed during a snow squall, killing one person.

The storm also brought down tree limbs and power lines.

A 6-year-old girl was hit by a tree limb that fell in her backyard in Canton, Mass., and later died, according to family members. Police in the town urged residents, and especially children, to stay indoors because of the danger from falling trees and tree limbs.

The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority said it closed a portion of a trolley line between Boston and suburban Newton when a tree fell across the tracks. It bused passengers Friday afternoon.

The storm left more than a foot of snow in some spots, but compared to the more than 9 feet that fell last winter, New Englanders said they could deal with it.

"It's been mild this winter. We deserve it. We've had several brutal years of snowstorms," said Raul Rodriguez, who works in the Connecticut attorney general's office.

The snowstorm came two weeks after a blizzard blanketed the East Coast but largely spared Boston and points north.

But not everyone was chipper about winter's belated blast.

"I hate snow," said Bruce Schulman, a Boston University history professor who was waiting at Boston's South Station to take a train to New York.

"Obviously, we've had a pretty mild winter so far, but we needed it after last year," Schulman said. "If I never see snow again, I won't miss it."

The National Weather Service said Worcester, Mass., saw 12.5 inches of snow, Boston got nearly 7, Providence, R.I., 5 and Hartford, Conn., more than 6.

Some parts of Maine saw more than 10 inches of snow.

Farther south, forecasters said New York's Long Island got more than 11 inches. Parts of New Jersey saw about 4 inches before the snow tapered off, while rain that turned to snow snarled the morning commute in eastern Pennsylvania and caused some schools to delay opening.

Warmer daytime temperatures this weekend across New England were expected to help melt some of the snow before the forecast blast of winter weather this week.

Information for this article was contributed by Denise Lavoie, Bob Salsberg, Dave Collins, Holly Ramer, David Sharp and Jennifer McDermott of The Associated Press.

A Section on 02/07/2016

Upcoming Events