New York: The atmosphere was particularly frosty in New York, where the new mayor acknowledged flaws in the cleanup and some residents complained that schools remained open while children elsewhere in the region stayed home.
The snowstorm expanded from Kentucky to New England but hit hardest along the a lot populated Interstate 95 corridor between Philadelphia and Boston. As much as 14 inches of snow fell in Philadelphia, with New York City seeing almost as much, and parts of Massachusetts were socked with as many as 18 inches. Temperatures were in the single digits or the teens in many places Wednesday.
Above 40 sanitations worker and more than 30 vehicles were sent to the area to finish the cleanup,
Blasio said in a statement that, noted he still felt the citywide response, overall, “was well-executed,”
De Blasio said officials made the right call in anticipating that streets would be passable enough for students to get to school safely, adding that his own teenage son had gone, if grouchily. But the Department of Education said Wednesday’s attendance rate was only 47.1 percent — far below the average daily attendance rate of about 90 percent for the 1.1 million students who make up the nation’s largest public school system.
According to the Sanitation Commissioner John Doherty, Traffic and the storm’s timetable complicated the cleanup.
Doherty also said, the storm arrived earlier than expected Tuesday and intensified right around the evening rush, making it difficult to plow and spread salt,
According to Riccio (who teaches public affairs at Columbia University), It was just the problem of a bad snowstorm coming at a bad time of the day.
According to the Fight aware, About 1,400 flights were canceled Wednesday into and out of some of the nation’s busiest airports, including in Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York and Boston
New York: Residents Are Not Happy With Snow Cleaning Sector
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