State Watch

Winter storm forecast to hit Northeast, mid-Atlantic with heavy snow, dangerous ice

Plows, at right, try to pass nearly stopped traffic, due to weather conditions, on Route 93 South, Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in Londonderry, N.H. By the time the winter storm wraps up Wednesday, snow totals in New England are expected to reach a couple of feet of snow in higher elevations to several inches along the coast. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

A substantial winter storm is set to hit much of the Northeast and mid-Atlantic this weekend, with the worst of the weather expected Saturday and Sunday.

Snow is expected to pile up from western Maryland to southern Maine, with the wide-range nor’easter also bringing severe ice that could make roads treacherous, the National Weather Service warned Friday.

The worst of the snow is set for the Hudson Valley, western Connecticut, Massachusetts and southern New Hampshire. Manchester, N.H., could see between 6 inches and a foot of snow, according to local meteorologists.

Heavy ice is also forecast for Appalachia as the storm moves north and east, threatening travel.

The major East Coast cities are expected to miss out on much of the storm. Significant snow is not forecast to fall in Washington, D.C., Baltimore or Philadelphia due to high temperatures that are predicted to bring rain and sleet. New York City may see some light snow, but significant pileup is unlikely.


Boston could see as much as 5 inches of snow between Saturday and Sunday.

“For the interior Mid-Atlantic and New England, there is increasing confidence in heavy snow from Saturday afternoon into Sunday,” the National Weather Service said Friday. “The greatest uncertainty in the rain-snow transition is from southeast Pennsylvania and northern New Jersey into southern New England.”

“The combination of heavy, wet snow and gusty winds in Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts may lead to some power outages and tree damage,” it added. “Gusty onshore winds may lead to minor flooding along the Mid-Atlantic and southern New England coasts, particularly for the Sunday morning high tide cycle.”