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snow is ahead for residents of northern New England a day after a
fast-moving storm dumped about a foot on many communities, but rain and
warmer temperatures could present problems in other states.
A
worker is reflected in a building facade as he clears snow from the
sidewalk in Boston, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2014. It was expected to drop 3 to
5 inches of snow on Boston, with 6 to 10 inches forecast for parts of
Northern New England, before moving out late Tuesday and early
Wednesday. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer)
A rain and snow mixture is possible Wednesday along the northern New England coast, but inland communities could see between 1 and 4 inches of snow, said Eric Schwibs, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Gray, Maine.
That's far less than the 12 inches of snow reported Tuesday night in New Boston, N.H., or the nearly 10 inches that fell in Kennebunk, Maine. There were no immediate reports of any major traffic messes caused by the weather.
MSN Weather: Check your local weather forecast
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Elsewhere in the country, as warmer temperatures bring rain and melt snow, concerns are being raised about the potential for flooding and collapsing roofs.
In Chicago, the weather service says people who live along rivers and in flood prone areas should prepare for possible flooding as the mounds of snow in yards and along streets melt.
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NBC News
Flooding Woes are on Tap for Snow-Buried Midwest
Winter’s woes aren’t just about severe storms and bitter cold — there’s still freezing rain and melting snow to grapple with.
Nasty
thunderstorms will target the Ohio Valley on Thursday and could bring
an inch-and-a-half of rain and create extreme flooding conditions in
parts of Indiana, Illinois, Michigan and Ohio, according to forecasts. A
flood watch has been issued across Illinois.
“The great melt has started,” National Weather Service meteorologist Brian Hirsch told NBC News.
Aside
from the rain, warmer temperatures are moving in, which will speed the
melt. Chicago, for instance, could hit a high of 50 degrees Thursday,
forecasts say. The Windy City endured a 52-day stretch of below-freezing
temperatures this winter, keeping the the accumulated snow firmly in
place.
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