A no-joke April Fool's snowstorm swirled toward the Northeast …
A pedestrian, forced into the street by blocked sidewalks, passes piles of snow outside Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, Thursday, Jan 27, 2011. (AP Photo/Josh Reynolds)
A pedestrian, forced into the street by blocked sidewalks, passes piles of snow outside Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, Thursday, Jan 27, 2011. (AP Photo/Josh Reynolds)
A no-joke April Fool's snowstorm swirled toward the Northeast …
A powerful storm stunned New England and northern New York with…
Parts of upstate New York are buried under up to 20 inches of heavy snow, with freezing …
Residents of a flood-prone Ohio city brightened as the waters …
Storms with heavy rain, high winds and hail knocked out power …
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Updated: Thursday, 31 Mar 2011, 10:25 AM MDT
Published : Thursday, 31 Mar 2011, 6:23 AM MDT
BOSTON (AP) - A no-joke April Fool's snowstorm swirled toward the Northeast Thursday, a cruel prank on a region that was finally seeing a reprieve from its long, white winter.
The spring snowstorm was expected to hit late Thursday and last into Friday morning — April Fool's Day — dropping up to a foot of snow in some areas including northwest New Jersey, eastern New York and around New England.
The timing could make for a messy Friday morning commute.
Storm warnings were up around the region, and parts of New Jersey and New York's Hudson Valley and Catskills could see 5 to 10 inches. Up to 8 inches were possible in Pennsylvania's Pocono Mountains.
High-altitude areas of central Vermont could get up to a foot of snow.
Coastal parts of Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut were expected to get mostly rain, or wet snow that won't accumulate.
No snow was expected in New York City, but the National Weather Service said commuters could see a rain-snow mix Friday morning.
The storm caps a particularly brutal winter for the region, with many cities setting record or near-record snowfalls.
But it's not all bad news, at least not for some skiers in western Pennsylvania.
Anna Weltz, a spokeswoman for Seven Springs Mountain Resort, told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette the resort will reopen for Saturday only to cash in on the new snow. The resort 45 miles southeast of Pittsburgh had already closed for the season.
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