Winter Storm Stella Is Bearing Down: What You Need to Know

Winter Storm Stella is forecast to blast up the East Coast late March 13 and March 14, providing much of the region with its biggest snowfall of the winter. Here is what you need to know:

Nor'easter forming off the Carolinas

A powerful nor'easter was forecast to develop along the East Coast late Monday and roll through the Northeast deep into Tuesday, the National Weather Service said. Heavy snow and strong winds with gusts of up to 50 mph could knock out power to thousands and snarl travel.



The weather service issued a blizzard warning for New York City and parts of northern New Jersey and southern Connecticut. More than 19 million people live in areas under a blizzard warning. Winter storm watches and warnings were also in effect all the way from the mountains of North Carolina to northern Maine, a distance of more than 1,000 miles.

The Weather Channel is calling the system Stella as part of its winter storm naming system. No other private firms, nor the weather service, use this name.

Some areas could get two feet of snow

Light snow is expected to begin late March 13 night and intensify overnight into early March 14 morning. The heaviest snowfall is expected March 14 morning through the afternoon. Some areas, particularly along the coast, could see a wintry mix of rain, sleet and snow. Areas that get all snow could get blasted with 12 to 18 inches of snow, with totals reaching two feet in some areas.

Big snow totals possible for big cities

New York and Boston could get 12-18 inches; isolated amounts of up to 2 feet are possible across northeastern Massachusetts. Philadelphia was forecast to see 8-14 inches. Baltimore was looking at 6-10 inches; Washington, 4-8 inches.

Midwest snow

Snow from the storm has already fallen across the Midwest. After unloading a widespread 5 to 9 inches of snow from eastern South Dakota to southwestern Minnesota and northern Iowa on Sunday, snow was pasting portions of Illinois, Indiana, Ohio and Michigan on March 13, AccuWeather said. Chicago was poised to pick up its first inch of snow since mid-December.

Air travelers, beware

More than 750 flights March 13 already were canceled by 8 a.m., most related to a major storm that swept through the Midwest over the weekend. Almost 1,000 Tuesday flights also were canceled. If forecasts are accurate, it remains possible that airports such as New York JFK, New York LaGuardia, Newark Liberty and Boston Logan could stop flights for much of the day Tuesday. Poor weather could extend into early Wednesday at some New England airports.

"Anybody looking to travel on Tuesday, whether by land or air, will find it difficult or impossible in many places," AccuWeather senior meteorologist Tom Kines warned.

What happens next?

Sorry, spring lovers. After the storm exits, a second blast of arctic air will keep the eastern half of the nation in its clutches for the rest of the week. “Winter will hold a tight grip on the Northeast in wake of the significant snowstorm early this week,” AccuWeather Meteorologist Max Vido said. Blowing snow could also complicate road crews' work.

Ben Mutzabaugh and Doyle Rice contributed to this report.

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