Area residents dig out stranded and buried cars after a record snowfall left over 3 feet on the ground on December 2, 2024 in Erie, Pennsylvania.
A new Arctic blast is set to dump more snow onto the Great Lakes and the Northeast, as winter weather caused transport chaos and left thousands stranded.
Lake-effect snow is still affecting areas downwind of Lake Erie after several punishing days of winter weather and is expected to last through Wednesday.
And the weather will continue with gusto this week: A strong clipper storm — a system that forms in Canada and moves across the Great Lakes into the United States — is set to move in from Quebec on Thursday, bringing heavy snow to Michigan, the National Weather Service said.
Some 5 million people are under winter weather and lake-effect snow warnings across the Great Lakes for Tuesday — including South Bend, Indiana; Muskegon, Michigan; Cleveland; Erie, Pennsylvania, and Syracuse, New York.
By Wednesday, the clipper weather system should bring snow to the interior Northeast and New England, while intensifying snowfall in areas downwind of the Great Lakes. NBC meteorologist Michelle Grossman said early Tuesday that some areas could get 12 inches of snow.
Other areas are feeling with freeze, with temperatures 10 to 15 degrees below seasonal averages in parts of the Ohio Valley, the mid-Atlantic and the Southeast.
In Pennsylvania, homes and vehicles were buried in more than 5 feet of snow, with chaos on the roads.
Police responded to a crash Monday afternoon on Interstate 94, near Hartford, Van Buren County, involving 14 passenger vehicles and three semi-trucks, with one driver suffering critical injuries, Michigan State Police said in a statement.