Saturday will remain cold but mostly sunny with highs of around 40 on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, according to the National Weather Service. Parts of Suffolk County experienced single-digit temperatures on Saturday morning, while the high is forecast around 33 in Islip later in the day.
A winter storm that left an estimated 3-5 inches across Long Island Sunday was the prelude to three days of brutal cold and winds that will bring temperatures that feel near zero, forecasters said.
A winter storm is expected to bring three to five inches of snow to Long Island from Sunday into Monday, when many people will be off for Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
Mother Nature will send a blast of wintry weather to Long Island this weekend, the National Weather Service said. According to James Tomasini, meteorologist with the NWS office in Upton, Friday's temperatures are expected to range from the upper 30s to the lower 40s.
Total snow accumulations between 3 and 5 inches are expected, with locally higher amounts up to 6 inches possible.
The latest monthly temperature outlook by the National Weather Service's Climate Prediction Center looks familiar to those from the summer and fall of 2024.
STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- The National Weather Service has issued a winter weather advisory for New York City, effective from 1 p.m. on Sunday, Jan. 19, until 4 a.m. on Monday, Jan. 20.
Expect a sunny, chilly (due to the winds) and dry day to start the week as temperatures warm near seasonable.
The builder of the icebreaker Aiviq has given more than $7 million to political campaigns, parties and committees since 2012. Under pressure from Congress, the Coast Guard purchased the vessel late last year.
In fact, most of the region will be waking up to air temperatures in the single digits on Wednesday. Farther east, parts of Long Island barely manage to stay in the double digits. And inland, much of North Jersey and the Hudson Valley will be below zero.
Temperatures sat in the low teens Tuesday morning in New York City, dipping below even the coldest day of January last year. But it won’t set records in New York City,
Sunday's winter storm dropped anywhere from an inch to a half-foot of snow across the Tri-State. Central Park reported 1.6 inches of snow. The highest totals included more than 14 inches in Kendall, New York,