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Suffolk dealing with blizzard, expecting dangerously low temps

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Benny Migliorino storm file photo from Pachogue.

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Thursday updates

Bay Shore schools are closed on Friday, it was announced.

Governor Andrew Cuomo has declared a State of Emergency for all of Long Island, Westchester and New York City.

The State of Emergency means that people should stay off the roads unless of an emergency or it’s otherwise absolutely necessary to travel.

Cuomo reportedly said the wind, which is only expected to intensify throughout the day, is making clearing roadways “almost impossible.”

JFK Airport is closed, MacArthur has cancelled all flights and LaGuardia has cancelled 95 percent of its flights as of noon on Thursday.

And the National Weather Service Blizzard Warning has been extended into Nassau County. Click here for the full Thursday morning storm briefing from the NWS.

Updates (Wednesday p.m.)

The National Weather Service has issued a blizzard warning for all of Suffolk County.

The warning runs from 1 a.m. Thursday through 1 a.m. Friday.

“Blizzard conditions expected,” the warning reads. “Travel will be very dangerous to impossible, including during the morning and evening commutes on Thursday. Damage to trees and power lines is possible.

“Unsecured Christmas decorations may be blown away or damaged. Total snow accumulation of 8 to 12 inches with locally higher amounts are expected.”

The Bay Shore, Islip and East Islip school districts will all be closed Thursday.

According to the Town of Islip, the public works department is prepared with 15,000 tons of salt and 10,000 yards of sand/salt mixture.

When the town’s plow operation is implemented, more than 400 plows, including from the town’s parks and waste management division, will be fueled, loaded and on the road.

“We’re in storm preparation mode,” said Supervisor Angie Carpenter. “Temperatures are expected to drop into the single digits, with wind chills making the ‘feel-like’ temperature negative double digits.

“Please keep your cars off the roadways, so that Town equipment can pass safely and effectively, remove basketball hoops from the streets, and stay indoors, unless absolutely essential that you go outside. We want our residents and our crews to weather this storm safely.”

Original post (Wednesday, a.m.): Suffolk County is bracing itself for the brunt of 2018’s first major snow storm, with temperatures then reaching as low as 3 degrees on Friday.

The National Weather Service has issued a Winter Storm Warning starting at 1 a.m. Thursday and running to midnight. The warning is in effect for Suffolk and southern Connecticut.

“Heavy snow and blowing snow expected,” the warning reads. “Blizzard conditions possible … Total snow accumulations of 6 to 10 inches are expected, with higher amounts in excess of one foot possible.”

National Weather Service meteorologist Joe Pollina said the snow will continue through 6 p.m. Thursday, with a chance that it keeps snowing to midnight, but not steadily.

“If people are commuting to work on Thursday, it will definitely be snowing at that point,” Pollina said.

He predicted those areas of 12 inches would likely fall over the South Fork.

Wind gusts can reach as high as 50 mph, and the temperatures to follow the storm are being described by the NWS as “dangerous,” with wind chills as low as -5 to -15 late Thursday night into Friday morning, and -15 to -25 late Friday night into Saturday morning.

The high/low temperatures are 30/25 degrees on Wednesday, 26/11 on Thursday, 15/3 on Friday, and 12/5 on Saturday. Temperatures are forecast to reach into the mid-20s again Sunday.

There’s also a Coastal Flood Advisory in effect from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Check back for more localized updates.

with Nicholas Esposito

File Photo: The blizzard of February 2016 on Long Island. (Credit: Benny Migliorino)

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