

“At this point, there is a very real possibility of a up to 10 inches of snow falling in our area before this weather event is over, so we ask the public to be prepared.” “We are planning for a long and complicated storm with higher accumulation totals than originally forecast,” Camden County Freeholder Susan Shen Angulo, liaison to her county’s public works department, said Tuesday. Public works crews across the region were gearing up for the storm before the first flakes fell. "That is certainly going to contribute to more downed trees and power lines, so we are expecting more power outages and that could be a significant number given the potential of snow." "The snow that does fall is going to have a lot of liquid in it, as in the past three storms," said Lance Franck, a meteorologist at the Weather Service’s Mount Holly office. Towns with high numbers of outages include Evesham, Millville, Commercial Township, Franklin, Clayton, Monroe, Buena Vista, Pittsgrove and Alloway. In Hopewell, the Cumberland Manor nursing home was operating on an emergency generator, officials said.

The hardest-hit communities were in Salem, Gloucester and Cumberland and Atlantic counties. Wednesday, more than 30,000 customers in South Jersey were without electricity - and the number was growing. The storm caused significant power outages, mostly in the Atlantic City Electric territory. No further snow is in the long-range forecast. There may be minor accumulation after that, but "essentially the storm should generally be done by that time." Blowing snow may be a concern throughout the day.
#March 4 snow totals nj archive#
To view winter storm totals collected from previous winters, please visit our archive page.Ī map of winter 2020-2021 snowfall is available here.Watch Video: Genius dog takes herself sledding in snow Highest snowfall totals by state for the March 34, 2023, snowstorm: Maine, 17 inches in Byron/South Paris/Belmont New Hampshire, 16 inches in South. The remaining reports are obtained from spotter and public observations sent to the NWS and Office of the NJ State Climatologist. "Coop" denotes observations from official National Weather Service Cooperative Observer Program stations. "CoCo" denotes observations from the CoCoRaHS precipitation observing network. Notes: Snow totals are posted for events where at least one station in NJ reports 2 or more inches of snow. Please read our Copyright and Data Disclaimer Information Snowfall amounts (inches) are taken from reports gathered by the NJ State Climatologist and the National Weather Service (NWS) Offices in Mt.
