Snow storm may ring in new year in county
Hark, the herald angels sing!
Or maybe that should be “Harold,” the multistate storm system that brought a white Christmas to Butler County and broke the area's snowfall record for Dec. 25.
With heavy snowfall Christmas Eve leading into Christmas Day, the National Weather Service estimates Butler County residents dealt with more than 6 inches of holiday snow.
Shannon Hefferan, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service, said the Christmas storm set the stage for a new era of Christmas Day snow records in Pittsburgh.
“We did break our record snowfall in Pittsburgh,” Hefferan said. “We pretty much shattered it.”
The National Weather Service calculated a snowfall of 5.1 inches in Pittsburgh on Friday, which broke the previous 3.5 inch record snowfalls on Christmas Day in 1909 and 1935.December so far has seen a total snowfall of about 26.1 inches in Pittsburgh, according to Hefferan.Hefferan said Western Pennsylvanians should expect to see more snow before the end of winter — even before the end of the year.She said the National Weather Service is already keeping an eye on possible New Year's conditions.“There is a disturbance right around New Year's Eve,” Hefferan said. “(But) that's all up in the air.”Temperatures rose into the 40s Sunday and Monday, leading to significant melting.
Although flooding in parts of Butler County remains a possibility, the National Weather Service's River Report on Monday afternoon indicated the levels of many Western Pennsylvanian rivers are expected to fall over the next two days.The National Weather forecast for Tuesday is looking at sun, with temperatures dipping into the 20s.The extended forecast predicts an 80% chance of rain the night of New Year's Eve. Meteorologists are monitoring the situation, according to Hefferan.In the meantime, Hefferan said the National Weather Service continues to see storms resulting from low-pressure systems coming out of the Rocky Mountains over the Great Plains, picking up moisture as they move across the South and ending in precipitation on the East Coast.“It seems to be the pattern at the moment,” Hefferan said.<i>Eagle staff writer Eric Jankiewicz contributed to this report.</i>
