The snow isn't just hitting us, of course. Roads have been a mess from the Midwest to the central Appalachians and on into New England.
One dramatic crash was down in West Virginia where a tractor trailer crashed and was left hanging off a bridge in Mason County. The driver was rescued.
So far the storm has caused one death, out in Missouri yesterday when the beginnings of the storms snarled traffic around St. Louis. One meteorologists there said it was the worst weather-related traffic snarl he's seen in decades.
Now the storm is in New England, and causing its own traffic trouble here. There's plenty of examples here in Vermont.
Up here in St Albans, the city police department said one its cruisers was hit by another car on a snowy road while responding to another crash.
Some of the various examples I've seen in Vermont at different times this morning included a crash that dropped northbound Interstate 89 in Williston down to one lane for a time. Route 7 in Ferrisburgh was closed for awhile due to a crash; Route 103 in Chester was also closed for a time due to a snow-related crash, and Route 11 in Londonderry was reduced to one lane, also due to a crash.
Shelburne Road near the on ramp to Interstate 189 was closed due to a crash around noon, too, so that must have been a real mess.
All the traffic cams I've seen in Vermont over the past hour show snow covered roads. In other words, be careful out there folks.
As of 12:30 p.m., it was snowing at a pretty good clip statewide. So far, as of noon, most places had maybe two to three inches of snow. It seems like there was a zone of heavier snow near and north of the Worcester range in north central Vermont.
Total accumulation is still forecast to be the same as forecast this morning. Although far northwest Vermont might get a bit more than originally forecast. For instance, older forecasts had St. Albans receiving three inches, but now that's been bumped up to four inches.
The snow will continue coming down at a good pace well into the afternoon. The snow will start to diminish after 3 p.m. in far northwest Vermont. That snow shut down will steadily move southeastward across Vermont in the very late afternoon and evening.
It'll finally conk out in far southeast Vermont before midnight.
Flurries might linger, but once the steady snow shuts down where you live, you'll hardly get any additional accumulation. You can start shoveling at that point.
Even after the snow ends, it will take time to clean up the roads, so be careful driving back home tonight. In the Champlain Valley, where snow will be tapering off as darkness falls, I don't anticipate any kind of traffic nightmare like we had during that big snow on November 10. But, expect delays and be patient.
Since it will still be snowing in southern and eastern Vermont late this afternoon and evening, roads remain lousy down there

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