NEWS
Coudersport Ambulance to Rt. 6 West
At 1:30 PM on Monday, Coudersport Ambulance has been called to Rt. 6 West for a woman ill.
Lane Restriction Tomorrow on I-180 WB in Muncy Creek Township, Lycoming County
Montoursville, PA – Motorists are advised of a right (driving) lane restriction tomorrow on Interstate 180 westbound at the Route 405 interchange (Exit 13) in Muncy Creek Township for a maintenance project.
On Tuesday, November 22, a Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT) maintenance crew will be performing bridge deck patching activities between the hours of 9:00 AM and 3:00 PM, weather permitting.
Motorists should be alert, slow down, expect travel delays, and drive with caution in the work zone.
Allegany County Office for the Aging announces upcoming workshops
Elder Abuse Awareness Seminar-
Allegany County Elder Abuse Prevention Committee and Lifespan’s Elder Abuse Prevention Program-
Join us as Tracey Siebert-Konopko, LMSW, and Stephanie Good, MSW, from Lifespan cover the topics
including identifying five types of elder abuse, the difference between elder abuse and being a victim of a scam or a crime,
discussing Adult Protective Services criteria and referral process, commonly used resources in our community, and your
role in prevention and identification of elder abuse in older adults.
Date and Time: Tuesday, December 6, 2022, from 1:00 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Location: Crossroads Conference Center located at 6087 State Rt. 19 N, Belmont, NY 14813
Cyber Security- Navigating the Internet Safely-
Leadership Allegany and the Alfred State Faculty & Cyber Security
Students- Join us as the Alfred State Cyber Security Club gives you tips and tricks about your devices and internet use.
Bring your phone, tablet, or laptop computer if you’d like. After the presentation, the students will help you and answer
questions about your devices.
Date and Time: Thursday, December 8, 2022, from 1:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m.
Location: Crossroads Conference Center located at 6087 State Rt. 19 N, Belmont, NY 14813
Registration for both of these events is required and can be made by calling the
Office for the Aging at 585-268-9390.
Nutrition Facebook Live- Erika Zerkowski, RD
December 29, 2022, at 1:00 p.m. – Meal planning – Does meal planning matter? YES – is the short answer. Join us as
our registered dietitian discusses how to and why to take the time to meal plan. She will give you some of her favorite tips
and tricks to keep things nutritious and on a budget. https://www.facebook.com/events/856844228587154/
Participants are encouraged to ask questions, give input, and offer suggestions for additional sessions with our
Registered Dietician!
Port Allegany Ambulance to Elementary School
At 1:08 PM on Monday, Port Allegany ambulance has been dispatched to the Elementary school for a 6 year old female fall victim.
PennDOT Driver License, Photo Centers Closed for Thanksgiving Holiday
Harrisburg, PA – The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT) today announced that all driver license and photo centers, including its full-service center in Harrisburg, will be closed Thursday, November 24 and Friday, November 25, 2022, in observance of the Thanksgiving holiday.
Customers may still obtain a variety of driver and vehicle products and services, including all forms, publications and driver training manuals, online through PennDOT’s Driver and Vehicle Services website, www.dmv.pa.gov.
Driver and vehicle online services are available 24 hours a day, seven days a week and include driver’s license, photo ID and vehicle registration renewals; driver-history services; changes of address; driver license and vehicle registration restoration letters; ability to pay driver license or vehicle insurance restoration fee; driver license and photo ID duplicates; and driver exam scheduling. There are no additional fees for using online services.
A complete listing of PennDOT driver and photo license center closings in 2022 is available online. If you are planning to visit one of PennDOT’s On-Line Messenger Service Centers, please call ahead for hours of operation during holidays.
Motorists can check conditions on major roadway miles by visiting www.511PA.com. 511PA, which is free and available 24 hours a day, provides traffic delay warnings, weather forecasts, traffic speed information, and access to more than 1,000 traffic cameras.
HAMILTON-GIBSON TO PRESENT SIX PERFORMANCES OF “A CHRISTMAS CAROL” ON SATURDAY, DEC. 3 AND ONE PERFORMANCE ON SUNDAY, DEC. 4
Photo by John Eaton
Three members of the Coolidge Theatre cast for the play “A Christmas Carol” look for their costumes. Shown are (from left)Josiah Hicks-Lee who plays Scrooge’s nephew Fred, Coleen Evert who is Mrs. Cratchit and Rob Kathcart who plays Ebenezer Scrooge.
Hamilton-Gibson Productions and sponsor C&N Bank are offering seven performances of “A Christmas Carol” as part of the 38th Annual Dickens of a Christmas celebration in Wellsboro.
“A Christmas Carol,” one of the world’s most enduring holiday stories, was adapted into a play by Christopher Schario from the novella of the same name written by Charles Dickens.
First published in London, England 179 years ago in 1843, “A Christmas Carol” is the tale of miserly Ebenezer Scrooge, a coldhearted man who learns the value of love thanks to the intervention of three ghosts who come to haunt him on Christmas Eve.
The mix of holiday cheer, whimsical humor, and a good dose of scary thrills combine with the timeless truths and themes in this story of a man’s redemption, making it one all can embrace.
Saturday, Dec. 3, Dickens’ classic ghost tale is being performed by one cast at 10:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. in the Coolidge Theatre in the Deane Center for the Performing Arts at 104 Main Street in Wellsboro and by a second cast at 11 a.m., 1 p.m. and 4 p.m. in the Warehouse Theatre at 3 Central Avenue in Wellsboro. Each performance will be just over one hour. Admission to a Saturday performance is $20 at the door.
At 2:30 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 4 in the Warehouse Theatre will be the seventh and last performance of “A Christmas Carol.” Admission is Pay-What-You-Can at the door.
For the Warehouse Theatre production, Sylvia Duterte is playing Tiny Tim and the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come and serves as a narrator. Also in the Warehouse Theatre cast are Tom Walrath as Ebenezer Scrooge; Sarah Duterte as Mrs. Cratchit and the Ghost of Christmas Past; Kristine Worthington as Belle and Mrs. Fezziwig; Brian Kennedy as Jacob Marley, Bob Cratchit and Mr. Fezziwig; and Bryson Fuhrer as Fred Scrooge and the Ghost of Christmas Present. Director is Gabe Hakvaag. Music director is Cherilyn Ayres.
For the Coolidge Theatre production, Asher Cuneo is playing Tiny Tim and the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come and serving as a narrator. Other Coolidge Theatre cast members are: Rob Kathcart as Ebenezer Scrooge and Coleen Evert as Mrs. Cratchit and the Ghost of Christmas Past. New this year are: Dawn McLelland as Scrooge’s sister Fan and his jilted fiancée Belle; Noyes Lawton asBob Cratchit and Marley’s Ghost, and Josiah Hicks-Lee as Scrooge’s nephew Fred and the Ghost of Christmas Present. Director and set designer is Thomas Putnam. Gary Citro is piano accompanist.
The script for both productions is the same. The Warehouse performances are presented in a traditional proscenium setting. The Coolidge production is set somewhat in the round, with the audience on two sides.
“A Christmas Carol” features six actors, one who plays Scrooge and the rest portraying a number of different characters. Slight costume changes are made in view of the audience and the action of the haunting tale unfolds seamlessly.
Much is left to the individual theatergoer’s imagination because the production celebrates the rich Dickens’ prose with the use of the “story theatre” form. Actors not only play characters, but also serve as narrators using the original Dickens’ language.
Tickets can be held up to 15 minutes before a performance. For tickets, go to hgp.booktix.com or for reservations call Hamilton-Gibson Productions at 570-724-2079 or email hamgib@gmail.com.
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH DICKENS OF A DINNER IS FRIDAY, DEC. 2
For Wellsboro’s 38th Annual Dickens of a Christmas celebration, the Trinity Lutheran Church and Trinity Lutheran School, both at 53 West Avenue in Wellsboro, are hosting a Dickens of a Dinner on Friday, Dec. 2 between 4:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.
The dinner is open to the public and will be in the Trinity Lutheran Church’s Family Life Center, located off West Avenue on Luther Lane behind the church.
On the menu are ham with raisin sauce, parsley potatoes, cranberry relish, winter vegetables, roll and butter, homemade dessert and hot and cold beverages.
The cost is $13 for adults, $11 for senior citizens over 60, $6 for children ages 5 to 12, and free for children under age 5.
Crafts will be on display and for sale.
For information or to purchase tickets in advance, call Trinity Lutheran at 570-724-7723.
STAGE FRIGHT TRIBUTE TO THE BAND’S 1976 FAREWELL CONCERT IS NEXT FRIDAY, NOV. 25
Photo provided
Stage Fright is a band composed of musicians from New York and Pennsylvania.
At 7 p.m. next Friday, Nov. 25 in the Coolidge Theatre at the Deane Center for the Performing Arts at 104 Main Street in Wellsboro, the five members of Stage Fright joined by seven guest musicians will perform a tribute to The Band, a Canadian-American roots rock group formed in Toronto, Ontario in 1968.The 12 performers will recreate The Last Waltz, The Band’s 1976 Farewell Concert given on Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 25, 1976. It was one of the most spectacular events in rock history.
Stage Fright is a band composed of musicians from New York and Pennsylvania.
At 7 p.m. next Friday, Nov. 25 in the Coolidge Theatre at the Deane Center for the Performing Arts at 104 Main Street in Wellsboro, the five members of Stage Fright joined by seven guest musicians will perform a tribute to The Band, a Canadian-American roots rock group formed in Toronto, Ontario in 1968.
The 12 performers will recreate The Last Waltz, The Band’s 1976 Farewell Concert given on Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 25, 1976. It was one of the most spectacular events in rock history.
At 5 p.m., turkey dinners were served to all 5,000 people attending followed by ballroom dancing to music by the Berkeley Promenade Orchestra and readings by poets Michael McClure and Lawrence Ferlinghetti. The Band’s show began at 9 p.m. and ended at 2 a.m.
The farewell concert kicked off with The Band’s “Up On Cripple Creek” and continued with other hits from “The Shape I’m In” to “It Makes No Difference”, “Life is A Carnival”, “Weight” and “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down.”
Among the musical legends that performed that night were Bob Dylan, Muddy Waters, Joni Mitchell, Neil Young, Van Morrison, Eric Clapton, Dr. John, Neil Diamond, Ronnie Hawkins, Bobby Charles, and Paul Butterfield. Taking part in two spontaneous jam sessions were Ringo Starr, Stephen Stills and Ron Wood.
“From 1968 to 1975, The Band was one of the most popular and influential rock groups in the world,” according to Bruce Eder who wrote about them in an article published in the “All-Music Guide.” “Their music was embraced by critics as seriously as the music of the Beatles and the Rolling Stones.”
Members of Stage Fright are: Joe Callahan of Wellsboro on guitar; Sean Monroe of Horseheads, N.Y. on upright bass; Mike Watkins of Addison, N.Y. on organ, keyboards, fiddle, mandolin and accordion; and from Corning, N.Y., Mike Nickerson on drums and Joe Narde on percussion.
Joining them for this performance are: singer Karin Knaus of Westfield; saxophonist and harmonica player Kenn Wenner of Jerry Duty, the Tribute Band to Jerry Garcia of the Grateful Dead based in Northern Pennsylvania; singer, guitarist and banjoist, Josh Sperrick of Corning, N.Y.; and singers and guitarists, Molly Cary, Brandon Lusk and Scott Turner, all of Wellsboro, and Houston Baker of Mansfield. They will play and sing some of the music by the famous artists that entertained during the Last Waltz concert.
The concert is BYOB with audience members encouraged to reserve a table, bring their own favorite beverages and snacks and sit with family and friends to enjoy the music.
Admission is $25. Children 12 and under are admitted free when accompanied by a paying adult; however seats must be reserved to accommodate them. For tickets and to reserve a table, call 570-724-6220 or visit www.deanecenter.com.
SCHOLARSHIP FOUNDED IN MEMORY OF STAN HECKATHORN
BRADFORD, Pa. — It was on the anniversary of the death of her husband, Stan, that Lynn Heckathorn ’78-’86 came up with an idea to create a scholarship at the University of Pittsburgh at Bradford in his memory.
She and her daughter, Debi Delach ’96, established the Stanley C. Heckathorn Memorial Scholarship for students pursuing any field of study.
Stan Heckathorn began his career at Pitt-Bradford in 1971 as director of operations. In 1980, he was promoted to director of business affairs, and was named vice president for business affairs in 1994.
Heckathorn left the position in 1997 to take a new role with a software company. He told The Bradford Era at the time that it was a difficult decision for him after 25 years.
At the time he left, Dr. Richard E. McDowell, then-president of the university, said, “Stan has shepherded the college through tremendous growth and development. His financial and organizational leadership, plus his strong personal commitment to Pitt-Bradford have helped shape the college.”
On the anniversary of his death in February, Lynn Heckathorn thought about how she could honor her husband’s memory and of his longtime affiliation with and love for Pitt-Bradford and thought of a scholarship in his honor.
Her next step was to contact her good friend at Pitt-Bradford, Dr. K. James Evans, retired vice president and dean of student affairs, who helped her make the necessary contacts to set up the scholarship.
“It’s a general scholarship,” she said. “I have no reservations about what they’re studying, it’s just for students who demonstrate financial need.”
“Stan was very instrumental in the development of the Pitt-Bradford campus, including the establishment of the Bradford Educational Foundation (which receives and administers gifts exclusively for the benefit of Pitt-Bradford) and the creation of the campus master plan,” said Richard Esch, president of Pitt-Bradford. “He was a great mentor and a good friend.”
Lynn Heckathorn said family members, including her daughter, have contributed to the scholarship. In addition, she plans to contribute to the new scholarship a portion of the proceeds from the sale of paintings at her recent art show on campus.
Heckathorn, who studied under Elga Dzirkalis at Pitt-Bradford, has had a successful career with her watercolor and oil paintings. The show, “360: A Retrospective, Artwork by Lynn Heckathorn,” held earlier this fall, displayed more than 100 of her paintings.
Delach said she is pleased with the scholarship in memory of her father and hopes it is successful.
Delach said she realizes how fortunate she was to have attended Pitt-Bradford tuition free, which was a benefit provided to employees and their dependents.
“I can’t imagine if you didn’t have the money to continue” attending college. “It would just be horrible.”
Delach said she and her mother attended the annual Donor Scholarship Luncheon in April, when donors have the opportunity to meet those students who received the scholarships they established.
“I think it is amazing that you can see and talk to the students and see what they’re interested in,” she added. “You can actually see the difference it’s making for them.”
The Heckathorn scholarship will be awarded for the first time during the 2023-24 academic year.
For more information about donor scholarships, please contact the Office of Philanthropic and Alumni Engagement at (814)362-5091.
TIOGA COUNTY WOMEN’S SHOOTING SOCIETY INVITES PUBLIC TO GO ON BUS TRIP TO GREAT AMERICAN OUTDOOR SHOW ON SATURDAY, FEB. 4; REGISTER NOW
Members of the Tioga County Women’s Shooting Society are inviting the public — men, women and children — to go on a one-day bus trip to the Great American Outdoor Show on Saturday only, Feb. 4, 2023.
The $100 per person fee must be paid in advance in order to reserve a seat on the bus. The deadline to register is Tuesday, Dec. 20. For reservations, contact Michelle Lawrence at 570-404-7738 or annietackleberry@hotmail.com.
The fee includes round trip bus transportation to and from the Pennsylvania Farm Show Complex in Harrisburg,hostess service and admission to the Great American Outdoor Show, which celebrates hunting, fishing and outdoor traditions that are treasured by millions of Americans and their families. The fee does not include meals.
The nine-day show begins on Saturday, Feb. 4 and ends on Sunday, Feb. 12. It will feature nearly 1,000 exhibitors ranging from gun manufacturers to outfitters to fishing boats and RVs, and archery to art and much more covering 650,000 square feet of exhibit hall space at the complex.
Those who go will board a motorcoach at the Benedict’s Bus Service terminal in Whitneyville near Wellsboro beginning at 6 a.m. on Saturday, Feb. 4 and will depart from there around 6:15 a.m.
Arrangements can also be made to pick up and drop off passengers at Mansfield, Blossburg, Liberty or Williamsport.
The motorcoach will stop for a fast food breakfast at McDonald’s in Selinsgrove, Pa. and arrive in Harrisburg at the complex around 10 a.m. that morning. Attendees will have lunch on their own while there.
At 4:30 p.m., the motorcoach will leave from Harrisburg with a dinner break for attendees at Marzoni’s in Selinsgrove at 5:30 p.m. and arrive at the terminal in Whitneyville at approximately 9:15 p.m. on Feb. 4.
DEP Invites Comments On Proposed Cryptocurrency Data Mining Operation On Shale Gas Well Pad In Elk County
DEP Invites Comments On Proposed Cryptocurrency Data Mining Operation On Shale Gas Well Pad In Elk County |
The Department of Environmental Protection invites comments on an Air Quality permit for a proposed cryptocurrency data mining operation on the Diversified Production LLC Longhorn Shale Gas Well Pad C in Jay Township, Elk County. (PA Bulletin, page 7164) Read more here. Operation of the proposed equipment would focus on electrical generation and cryptocurrency data mining operations and not unconventional natural gas well site operations or remote pigging. The proposed sources would be in addition to Diversified’s existing equipment. This project would install four Waukesha engines (each rated at 1,900 bhp), one Waukesha engine (rated at 1,680 bhp), and one small generator set rated 1.8 kw. Potential emissions from all proposed sources are esti- mated to be (tpy): 8.87 VOC, 13.44 NOx, 26.88 CO PM10 5.92, and 8.47 HAPs. Written comments or requests for a public hearing should be directed to Eric A. Gustafson, 230 Chestnut St., Meadville, PA 16335, phone number (814) 332-6819. Read the entire PA Bulletin notice for more information. (PA Bulletin, page 7164) For more information on environmental programs in Pennsylvania, visit DEP’s website, Click Here to sign up for DEP’s newsletter, sign up for DEP Connects events, sign up for DEP’s eNotice, visit DEP’s Blog, Like DEP on Facebook, Follow DEP on Twitter and visit DEP’s YouTube Channel. |
Chrissy Tingley Speaks At Coudersport Rotary
Coudersport Rotary Club welcomed Chrissy Tingley, Department Manager of the Irwin Rehabilitation Center at UPMC Cole, as their speaker at the November 14, 2022, meeting at A&W West End Grill. (Pictured: Chrissy Tingley and Rotarian Andrea Streich)
Kinzua Quality Deer Cooperative to Operate Two Deer Check Station on SR 59 and SR 346 for Firearms Deer Season
Bradford, Pa.: The Kinzua Quality Deer Cooperative (KQDC) will operate TWO DEER CHECK STATIONS this year on SR 59 and SR 346. The days of operation will be Saturday, Sunday, Monday, November 26-28, and Saturday, December 3. Hours of operation will be 10:00 a.m. until 6:00 p.m. all four days.
One KQDC deer check station will be in Marshburg along SR 59 again this year. The check station will be 0.4 miles east of Timberdoodle Flats at the John Perkins Parking Lot. Wooden signs on sawhorses will be placed along SR 59 and at Timberdoodle Flats to direct hunters to the check station.
The second KQDC deer check station will be at the Willows Restaurant on SR 346 along Willow Creek in Corydon Township about four miles east of the Willow Bay Recreation Area. The GPS address is 2669 West Washington Street.
All deer will be weighed, measured, and aged for FREE for hunters. Hunters will receive a fluorescent orange KQDC hat for bringing their deer to the check station. Each hunter bringing in a deer for checking will also receive a ticket on a cash raffle. Hunters bringing in antlerless deer will be eligible for a $500 raffle. Hunters bringing in an antlered deer will be eligible for a $250 raffle.
The KQDC is managed for Quality Deer and a Quality Forest Ecosystem to provide a Quality Hunting experience. Other goals are to provide quality forests for landowners to manage for timber products, local employment, numerous outdoor recreation activities, and quality habitat for all wildlife.
The Kinzua Quality Deer Cooperative is an on-going demonstration, begun in 2000, of how hunting can be used to meet the goals of multiple publics for managing deer. A partnership of forest landowners, forest managers, biologists, hunters, and local businesses developed the program which relies on hunters to manage deer density on a representative forested area. The program is conducted on a 74,000-acre forested demonstration area in northwestern Pennsylvania.
#
Note to reporters: Photo 1 – A buck ready for weighing at last year’s check station.
Route 219 Reopened at 6:25 AM after Overnight Closure
Road Reopened: Rte 219 NB/SB has been reopened from Peters Rd to I-90, Orchard Park, Erie Co.
Robert N. Bob Garman, 79, of First Fork Rd., Sinnemahoning, PA
Robert N. Bob Garman, 79, of First Fork Rd., Sinnemahoning, PA passed away unexpectedly at his residence, Sinnemahoning, PA on Sunday morning (November 20, 2022). He was born October 23, 1943 in Renovo, PA a son of the late Peter I. and Martha K. Kephart Garman. On October 12, 1986 in Emporium, PA he married Sally A. Sitter, who survives.
Bob was a lifelong resident of Cameron County. He served with the US Marines during Vietnam War. He was a self employed contractor for many years. He was an active member of the Down County Baptist Church and loved spending time in his garden and in his apple orchard. He enjoyed feeding the deer and birds near his home.
In addition to his wife Sally he is survived by a daughter, Linda Winkelvoss (Bert), Washington, PA; son, Clarence Holton (Toni), Parkesburg, PA; four grandchildren: Emily Winkelvoss Wade (Logan), Ashley Winkelvoss Capra (Erik), Dominic Holton, Brandon Holton and a sister, Blanche “Peggy” Fox.
In addition to his parents he was preceded in death by two brothers, Theodore “Bud” Garman and Peter Garman, Jr.
Visitation will be at the Down County Baptist Church, Rt 555, Driftwood, PA on Tuesday (November 22, 2022) from 12:00-12:45 PM followed by a Funeral Service at 1:00 PM with Pastor Richard Bennett, officiating. A Military Service will follow by the Cameron County Memorial Detail.
Memorial Contributions may be made to Down County Baptist Church, PO Box 81, Driftwood, PA 15832
Online Condolences may be placed at www.BarnettFuneralHome.net
BARNETT FUNERAL HOME, Inc. entrusted with arrangements.
Owlett Announces $2.4 Million for Westfield Laurel Health Center
HARRISBURG – Rep. Clint Owlett (R-Tioga/Bradford/Potter) today announced a $2.4 million grant for improvements at Westfield Laurel Health Center.
“We are blessed with some great health care facilities here in our region, and I am always happy to advocate for them,” Owlett said. “This is an important investment in our community and our future.”
The funding will support construction of a new health center on existing health center property, behind the current health center building. The unused back half of the existing health center and the garage will be removed, and the new building will then be built behind the remaining health center structure. Once the new facility is built, furnished and equipped, the original health center will be removed from the property and the lot paved for parking.
The funding was awarded through the state’s Redevelopment Assistance Capital Program (RACP), a Commonwealth grant program that supports the acquisition and construction of regional economic, cultural, civic, recreational and historical improvement projects. All RACP projects require a 50% match of funds from the grant recipient.
Causer, Dush Announce More Than $3 Million in Funding for Health Care Facilities in Bradford, Kane
BRADFORD –Rep. Martin Causer (R-Cameron/McKean/Potter) and Sen. Cris Dush (R-25) today announced more than $3 million in funding to support facility improvements at both Bradford Regional Medical Center and the Lutheran Home at Kane.
“It is important we continue to invest in our health care and long-term care facilities to meet the needs of our residents,” Causer said. “I was pleased to support this much-needed funding for our communities.”
“These grants will go a long way toward meeting the challenge of ensuring access to quality health care in our rural communities,” Dush said. “I was happy to support these important investments.”
The Lutheran Home at Kane will receive $2.44 million toward construction of a 10,700-square-foot addition that will house a new Alzheimer’s/dementia unit and an energy-efficient kitchen, installation of a new backup generator and renovation of the old kitchen space to provide offices and meeting facilities.
Bradford Regional Medical Center will receive $1.07 million for a number of infrastructure upgrades, including replacing the roof at the Pavilion, elevator and Wi-Fi upgrades, emergency drop-off sidewalk and lot replacement, air conditioner upgrades, east wing cooling tower replacement and envelope building repairs.
The grants were awarded through the state’s Redevelopment Capital Assistance Program.
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 10 PM EST THIS
EVENING…
- WHAT…Lake effect snow. Additional snow accumulations of up to
3 inches in the most persistent lake snows. Winds gusting as
high as 35 mph. - WHERE…Allegany county.
- WHEN…Until 10 PM EST this evening.
- IMPACTS…Plan on slippery road conditions. Areas of blowing
snow could significantly reduce visibility.
LAKE EFFECT SNOW WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 10 PM EST
THIS EVENING…
- WHAT…Heavy lake effect snow. Additional snow accumulations of
2 to 4 inches in the most persistent lake snows. Winds gusting
as high as 40 mph. - WHERE…Chautauqua and Cattaraugus counties.
- WHEN…Until 10 PM EST this evening.
- IMPACTS…Plan on slippery road conditions. Areas of blowing
snow could significantly reduce visibility.