Article

Monday, January 26, 2026
 
search-icon

Northeast gets last brunt of winter storm that brought ice, snow, cold to much of the US

publish time

26/01/2026

publish time

26/01/2026

WASHINGTON, Jan 26, (AP): The US work week opened with yet more snow dumping on the Northeast under the tail end of a colossal winter storm that brought ice and power outages, impassable roads, canceled flights and frigid cold to much of the southern and eastern United States. Deep snow - over a foot (30 centimeters) extending in a 1,300-mile (2,100-kilometer) swath from Arkansas to New England - halted traffic, canceled flights and triggered wide school cancellations Monday.

Up to two feet (60 centimeters) were forecast in some of the harder-hit places. In Falmouth, Massachusetts, about an hour's drive south of Boston, snow was coming down in sheets and closing down the town. Local minister Nell Fields had to shovel out just to be able to let her dog outside. Seven inches (18 centimeters) had fallen, with up to that much more still on the way.

"I feel that the universe just put a big, huge pause on us with all the snow,” Fields said. On Manhattan’s Upper East Side, January Cotrel enjoyed the fresh snow on a block that always closes during snowstorms for residents to sled, throw snowballs and make snowmen. "I pray for two feet every time we get a snowstorm. I want as much as we can get,” she said. "Let the city just shut down for a day and it’s beautiful, and then we can get back to life.”

Meanwhile, bitter cold followed in the storm's wake. Overnight Sunday, the entire Lower 48 states were forecast to have their coldest average low temperature - 9.8 degrees (minus 12.3 Celsius) - since January 2014. Record warmth in Florida was the only thing keeping that average from going even colder, said former National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration chief scientist Ryan Maue, who calculates national averages based on National Weather Service data.

From Montana to the Florida Panhandle, the weather service posted cold weather advisories and extreme cold warnings as temperatures in many places dipped to zero (minus-18 degrees Celsius) and even colder. Wind made conditions even chillier and the overnight cold threatened to refreeze roads early Monday in a cruel reprise of the weekend's lousy travel weather. Even with precipitation ending in Mississippi, "that doesn't mean the danger is behind us," Gov. Tate Reeves said in a news conference Sunday.