Snowstorm batters western New York, restricting travel ahead of Thanksgiving

Snowstorm batters western New York, restricting travel ahead of Thanksgiving

Nov 19 (Reuters) - Snowfall of more than 6 feet in western New York state prompted local officials on Saturday to further restrict road travel and forced airlines to cancel flights in the Buffalo area, just ahead of the busy Thanksgiving holiday week.

New York Governor Kathy Hochul called in the National Guard, deploying about 150 members to help with snow removal and resident needs in the hardest-hit parts of Erie County.

At a press conference Saturday afternoon, Hochul said she would sign a request for a federal emergency declaration to seek reimbursements for expenses on storm response.

Erie County Executive Mark Poloncarz said most residents heeded driving bans and stayed home, which he believes averted tragedies.

"We've avoided a lot of the incidents and accidents that unfortunately have taken lives in the past," he said at the news event in Hamburg, N.Y., one of the areas hardest hit by snow. "I believe lives have been saved."

Erie County, which has felt the brunt of the snowfall, recorded totals of 77 inches in Orchard Park, New York, the site of the NFL's Buffalo Bills home field.

Squalls began blowing in from Lake Erie and Lake Ontario on Thursday to produce the region's first major snowstorm of the season, more than a month before the start of winter.

According to the National Weather Service, conditions could persist through Monday morning.

Nearly 90 crashes have been reported and almost 290 people were rescued from roads, Hochul said.

"We do have some passenger vehicles that have been abandoned," she said. "They're being dealt with, but the scale is nowhere near what we've seen with storms from the past."



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