Tag: Winter

  • East Coast battered by high winds as winter storms hit region

    East Coast battered by high winds as winter storms hit region

    Severe weather knocked out power for tens of thousands of homes and businesses in the eastern portion of the U.S. 

    More than 77,000 homes and businesses in Pennsylvania were without power as of 10 a.m. ET, according to PowerOutage.US. Over 37,000 in New Jersey, about 22,000 in New York and nearly 16,000 customers in Connecticut were without power on Monday morning.

    More than 55,000 people in Virginia and nearly 50,000 in Maryland were also affected. Over 16,000 in Kentucky and more than 17,000 people in Alabama were also out of power as of 9 a.m. Monday, according to the outage tracker.

    People walk along the Sixth Avenue in Midtown Manhattan as snow falls in New York City on Feb. 15, 2025. (CHARLY TRIBALLEAU/AFP via Getty Images)

    TRIPLE THREAT OF SEVERE STORMS, EXTREME FLOODING AND SNOW THREATENS WIDE SWATH OF US

    The outages came as a powerful storm system brought severe weather – including snow, rain and strong winds, to the central and eastern U.S.

    In total, the National Weather Service (NWS) offices nationwide have issued cold weather advisories and extreme cold warnings for more than 58 million Americans from the U.S.-Canada border to Texas. However, the weather is expected to continue to hammer a significant part of the U.S. over the coming week. 

    The NWS office in State College, Pennsylvania, warned that strong winds would continue into Monday as freezing temperatures and “scattered snow showers” persist. 

    A Connecticut road is closed on Feb. 17 after strong winds toppled trees and knocked out power for thousands across the East Coast.

    A Connecticut road is closed on Feb. 17 after strong winds toppled trees and knocked out power for thousands across the East Coast. (Fox News Digital / Fox News)

    The NSW office in New York also posted on X that the area is in store for a “blustery and cold day” on Monday. It is projected that daytime temperatures will be in the upper 20s and low 30s. The office expects “blustery winds” of up to 50 mph that “will make it feel like it is in the teens.” A few flurries are also possible, the office said.  

    LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOODING LOOMS AS TORRENTIAL RAINS SOAK TENNESSEE, KENTUCKY

    The NWS office in Louisville, Kentucky, posted on X, that a winter storm watch is still in effect for the entire area, with snow accumulations between 2 and 6 inches expected Tuesday night and through Wednesday. It also warned travelers that “hazardous road conditions will negatively impact the Wednesday morning commute.” 

    Weather isn’t easing up in Alabama either. The NWS office in Birmingham posted a five-day weather outlook on X showing how colder weather will arrive through the week. 

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    Rain is expected from Tuesday into Wednesday. 

    “There’s also a small window of snow mixing in or switching over to snow in the early morning hours across the northern portions of Central Alabama,” the office posted on X.

    In Virginia, the NWS office warned that there could be “a significant winter storm” on Wednesday and Thursday. However, there is still uncertainty with respect to the exact magnitude and placement of the heaviest snow.

    FOX Weather contributed to this report

  • House GOP’s budget impasse thaws just as winter storm sacks Capitol

    House GOP’s budget impasse thaws just as winter storm sacks Capitol

    It is said that talk is cheap. 

    And that’s why House Republicans have done so much of it as they attempted to forge an internal agreement on a budget plan to slash taxes and cut spending. 

    It is now the middle of February. House Republicans struggled to finalize plans for what President Donald Trump terms a “big beautiful bill.” Especially when you consider all of the talking Republicans did – among themselves – since the start of the year.

    MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE SHARES WHAT’S NEXT FOR HOUSE DOGE PANEL, WHETHER ELON MUSK WOULD TESTIFY

    House Republicans cloistered themselves for not one but two daylong sessions on Saturday, Jan. 4, and Sunday, Jan. 5, at Fort McNair in Washington, D.C. That’s where House Budget Committee Chair Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, and Ways and Means Committee Chair Jason Smith, R-Mo., presented their ideas to slash spending and engineer a budget reconciliation package.

    Keep that term in mind. Budget reconciliation. More on that in a moment.

    Back on Capitol Hill, House Republicans convened multiple large and small meetings to lay out details on their package. That included a three-day session at President Trump’s golf club in Doral, Florida. 

    Republicans returned to Washington with claims of “unity.” But still no agreement.

    THE CONFIRMATION JUGGERNAUT: HOW TRUMP IS GETTING EVERYTHING HE WANTS IN BUILDING HIS CABINET

    Rep. Jason Smith, Republican from Missouri

    Rep. Jason Smith, R-Mo. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call via Getty Images/File)

    Arrington hoped to prepare the budget plan in his committee last week. Such a meeting would produce a “budget reconciliation” package. Budget reconciliation is a process where the Senate can bypass a filibuster and approve a bill with a simple majority. But the package must be fiscal in nature, such as addressing spending cuts and taxes. Thus, this plan likely qualifies for reconciliation. Senate Republicans must lean on budget reconciliation because they only have 53 GOP members. Not 60, which are required to break a conventional filibuster. But reconciliation is part of the annual budget process. And the reconciliation option isn’t available unless a budget blueprint is in place. No budget? No reconciliation.

    House Republicans grappled last week to reach a deal. So the House GOP brass set off for the White House for a meeting with the president.

    “He’s going to have to make some decisions,” said one senior House Republican of President Trump, noting he’s the only one who could help the party coalesce around an idea.

    The session lasted for nearly five hours, although President Trump wasn’t in the session the entire time. Meantime, House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., was supposed to meet at the Capitol with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. But Netanyahu was left cooling his heels on Capitol Hill as Republicans debated plans and scribbled figures on whiteboards. 

    Netanyahu speaking to Congress; Rep. Johnson and Sen. Cardin behind him

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addresses a joint meeting of Congress at the U.S. Capitol on July 24, 2024. (Kent Nishimura/Getty Images)

    “[President Trump] set the tone for us to push through some things that we were stuck on,” said Arrington when he returned to the Capitol. 

    “We made serious progress and have narrowed the gap to where we’re very close to getting ready to bring this to Budget Committee,” said Senate Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La. 

    Johnson even predicted the plan may be ready later that evening. Hence, a group of Republicans retreated for another set of meetings until well after midnight.

    “I’d like to see their plan,” complained Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn. “They’re not going to force me into something.” 

    HOUSE AND SENATE REPUBLICANS CLASH OVER MAMMOTH TRUMP BUDGET BILL SEEKING $1.5T IN CUTS 

    Mike Johnson in c loseup shot

    House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La. (Getty Images/File)

    By Friday morning, Johnson was again diminishing expectations.

    “It may not be today,” said Johnson. 

    However, the speaker hinted that the details could be ready later that weekend. 

    “We’ve got a few more people we’ve got to talk with and a couple more boxes to check,” said Johnson. “The expectation is it we’ll be marking up a budget next week, potentially as early as Tuesday.”

    But the weekend optimism died when the speaker appeared on “Fox News Sunday.”

    “We were going to do a Budget Committee markup next week. We might push it a little bit further because the details really matter,” said Johnson on Sunday. “But we’re getting very, very close.”

    Johnson attended the Super Bowl in New Orleans later that day with President Trump. So could there have been a breakthrough amid the confetti, étouffée and Cooper DeJean madness of the Super Bowl?

    “Are we going to have this bill this week, yes or no?” yours truly asked the speaker as he entered the Capitol on Monday afternoon.

    Mike Johnson, left; Donald Trump, right

    Speaker Johnson is working to get a unified GOP effort for a reconciliation budget package for President Trump. (Getty Images)

    Johnson deployed his favorite verbal placeholder.

    “Stay tuned,” said the speaker, who uses this line as frequently as a 1950s radio announcer.

    “You said last week we were going to have it,” I countered.

    “I know,” said Johnson. “I’ve got 220 people that have shared their opinions on this.”

    “Did you overpromise?” I followed up.

    “No. No,” responded Johnson. “The hard work of the negotiation has to be done on the front end so that we can deliver a product that we know everybody will support.”

    Senate Budget Committee Chair Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., tired of the House GOP’s dithering last week, wrote his own budget package, which significantly differs from what the House intends to do. While the House blueprint will focus on taxes and government cuts, Graham’s measure would boost energy production and also call for spending money to tighten the border. The South Carolina Republican has long observed that people voted for border security in the election. He argues that provision should come first.

    SENATE DOGE CHAIR SAYS SHE SPEAKS WITH ELON MUSK ‘EVERY FEW DAYS’ AS TRUMP ADMIN SLASHES SPENDING

    Lindsey Graham closeup shot pointing

    Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik/File)

    Johnson said he talked with Graham at the Super Bowl and “he and I are on the same page.”

    When asked by CNN’s Manu Raju whether Graham’s gambit was “complicating this,” Johnson answered, “Not much.” 

    But when yours truly asked if the Senate moving first would help “increase the sense of urgency” in the House, the speaker responded differently.

    “I wouldn’t say it’s helpful,” said Johnson. 

    An hour later, reporters again peppered Johnson for timing details.

    “I’m not going to give a projected date yet because then you’ll tell me that I overshot,” said Johnson. “So just wait. Everybody relax.”

    This entire imbroglio boils down to one factor: the math. 

    House Republicans currently boast 218 votes in the 433-member House. There are two vacancies. They can barely lose a vote on their side. Getting any bill across the floor is a monster. 

    A major snowstorm was in the forecast for Washington, D.C., on Tuesday afternoon and into the day on Wednesday. House Republican leaders huddled in the Radio/TV Gallery in the Capitol Visitor Center for their weekly press conference Tuesday morning.

    “Ready for snowmageddon?” House Republican Conference Chair Lisa McClain, R-Mich., asked the press corps. “And the question is: Are we going to get it today or not?”

    US Capitol and grounds covered in snow, kids on sleds

    Families enjoy the snow by the Capitol, Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2025, as they sled after a snowstorm in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

    “Well, you were supposed to get a budget last week, and we didn’t,” observed your trusty reporter, drawing laughter from scribes and lawmakers alike.

    At the press conference, Johnson insisted that the budget was on track. He announced that the Budget Committee would meet Thursday on the package. 

    But what unfolded in the news conference wasn’t nearly as interesting as what happened afterward. 

    Arrington hustled over to the Radio/TV Gallery to privately meet Johnson and other GOP leaders in an adjacent anteroom. Johnson and Arrington had not been on the same page with the budget. Fox is told that Arrington and Johnson had to make sure they were aligned. Arrington had pushed for deeper cuts than Johnson.

    By Wednesday morning, Arrington delivered a budget blueprint. It called for $2 trillion in cuts from what’s called “mandatory spending,” like entitlements. It features $4.5 trillion in tax reductions. And it lifts the debt ceiling by $4 trillion.

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    The question now is whether House Republicans can pry a bill out of committee, let alone pass it on the floor.

    But after weeks of jawboning, House Republicans finally had a budget.

    And, for the record, Washington, D.C., also got snow.

    About 7 inches.

  • School Holidays 2025 List: Winter Vacation Extended in Delhi, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Other States Amid Cold Wave, Know Dates Here

    School Holidays 2025 List: Winter Vacation Extended in Delhi, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Other States Amid Cold Wave, Know Dates Here

    Delhi, January 10: As temperatures across North India continue to plummet, a severe cold wave has gripped the region, prompting authorities to take precautionary measures to ensure the safety of students. Several states, including Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, and Bihar, have extended school holidays, offering a much-needed respite from the harsh winter weather. The decision comes as minimum temperatures in many areas dip to record lows, disrupting daily life. Uttar Pradesh School Holiday: Schools Closed from December 31 to January 14 for Winter Break; 15-Day Leave for Students Up to 8th Grade.

    In addition to the northern states, some southern regions like Telangana and Tamil Nadu have also declared school holidays, albeit for festive occasions such as Sankranti and Pongal. These measures aim to prioritise student well-being while adapting to local climatic and cultural contexts. Scroll down to check the list of states where holidays have been extended. Delhi Weather Update Today, January 10: Over 100 Flights Delayed As Dense Fog Hits Operations at IGI Airport (Watch Video).

    School Holidays 2025 List:

    1. Delhi: Schools closed from January 1 to 15, 2025, reopening on January 16.
    2. Bihar: Schools for up to class 8 are closed until January 11, 2025.
    3. Chandigarh: Schools closed until January 11, reopening on January 13, 2025.
    4. Haryana: Schools closed from January 1 to 15, reopening on January 16, 2025.
    5. Uttar Pradesh: In Ghaziabad, schools will remain closed for up to class 8 until January 12. While in Noida, schools closed up to class 8 until further notice. In Lucknow, schools will remain closed up to class 8 until January 11, with online classes for classes 9 to 12.
    6. Jharkhand: Schools closed from January 7 to 11, 2025, for all students up to class 8.
    7. Himachal Pradesh: Schools closed from January 1 to February 1, 2025.
    8. Jammu and Kashmir: Winter vacation until February 28, 2025, for students up to class 12.
    9. Telangana: Schools closed from January 11 to 16, 2025, due to Sankranti holidays.
    10. Tamil Nadu: School holidays for Makar Sankranti and Pongal festivals.

    The severe cold wave sweeping across northern and central India has led several states to extend school holidays, prioritising the health and safety of students. With temperatures dropping significantly, these extended breaks provide students with the necessary rest while also ensuring they remain safe from the harsh weather conditions. Parents, students, and school staff are advised to stay updated with the local weather and school announcements, as the reopening dates might vary depending on the prevailing conditions.

    (The above story first appeared on LatestLY on Jan 10, 2025 01:32 PM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly.com).