Roofs collapse under snow in Western New York
Buffalo and western New York state remained paralyzed by the historic snowfall
Buffalo: Roofs creaked and collapsed and homeowners toiled to clear waist-high snow drifts atop their houses on Thursday as another storm continued to bury Buffalo and western New York state, which remained paralyzed by the historic snowfall.
Even for the Buffalo area - one of America's snowiest places - the snowfall was historic, as the three-day total neared 8 feet (2.4 meters), the amount the region typically gets over an entire year.
Some areas got close to 3 feet (0.9 meters) of new snow by Thursday afternoon. The storms were blamed for at least 10 deaths in western New York, mostly from exposure and heart attacks, including several people who were shoveling snow.
Things could quickly get worse for the region on Lake Erie: Rain and temperatures as high as 60 degrees Fahrenheit (15.5 Celsius) were forecast over the weekend, raising the specter of flooding and an even heavier load on roofs.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo begged drivers to stay off slippery, car-clogged roads in while crews tried to dig out.
With roads impassable, driving bans in effect and the Buffalo Bills' stadium buried in snow, the NFL decided to move the Bills' Sunday home game against the New York Jets to Monday night in Detroit.
Earlier in the day, Cuomo said holding the game would jeopardize public safety.
More than 50 people were evacuated from several mobile home parks because roofs were buckling. In one town authorities said more than a dozen structures collapsed, as did a metal warehouse operated by a Christmas decorations company.
Local media reported that about 180 residents of an assisted living facility were evacuated after staff members noticed the ceiling bulging under the weight of the snow.
Homeowners and store employees around the region climbed onto roofs to shovel off the snow and reduce the danger.
National Guardsmen drove nurses to work their hospital shifts. State police helped elderly residents trapped in their homes. State officials assembled 463 plows, 129 loaders and 40 dump trucks from across the state.
A stretch of the New York State Thruway, the state's main highway, remained closed, with more than 300 truckers idled.
With deliveries interrupted, some grocery stores reported running low on staples like bread and milk.
"No matter how you cut it, this event will end up in the top five for the Lake Erie area," said National Weather Service Director Louis Uccellini.