Snow removal efforts continue across the Northeast after more than a foot of deadly snow fell in parts of the Northeast on Tuesday, and it won’t be long until another round of rapid snowfall brings more wintry weather to the region. It won’t cost you anything.
The first storm system, Alberta Clipper, will bring snow to the Dakotas, Minnesota and the Great Lakes on Wednesday and continue moving east over the next 36 hours.
And another storm will arrive soon after, dumping even more snow on I-95 on the East Coast.
Northeastern Great Lakes areas hit by snow on Thursday
The system is expected to reach Wisconsin and Michigan by Thursday, where it will produce snow that can be cleared.
The FOX Prediction Center said cities like Milwaukee and Detroit are not expected to see much snow in the future as most of the precipitation will remain in the north.
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Instead, cities like Green Bay, Wisconsin and Traverse City, Michigan will receive several inches of snow.
The winter storm will make its final landfall in the Northeast Thursday afternoon and evening.
The FOX Prediction Center predicts the low pressure system will strengthen as it approaches the region, bringing more widespread snow across New England.
That includes Connecticut, where as much as 15 inches of snow fell near Hartford due to a northeastern influence that affected the region on Tuesday.
Relatively little snow is expected in Connecticut, with milder snow expected in the north.
Several inches of snow could accumulate in parts of Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine.
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Upstate New York could end up seeing the highest snowfall amounts due to lake effect snow produced by Lake Ontario moisture and rift along the Tug Hill Plateau.
A second storm system is being monitored
The FOX Prediction Center said the second storm will move out of the Rocky Mountains and into the plains just as the first storm moves out of the Northeast.
The second storm will move further south than the first, bringing snow to cities including Omaha, Nebraska, Kansas City, St. Louis, Missouri, Indianapolis, and Louisville, Kentucky.
From Friday night into Saturday, the storm will cross the Appalachians and slide off the mid-Atlantic coast, before bringing snow to cities along Interstate 95 from New York City south through Washington.





