Snowstorm socks Five Towns with more than 10 inches

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More than 10 inches of snow was reported to have fallen in and around the Five Towns as a nor’easter swept across Long Island on Monday with lingering snowfall, rain and gusty winds on Tuesday.

Schools were closed both days and Gov. Andrew Cuomo a declared state of emergency for Long Island and New York City. The Long Island Rail Road temporarily suspended service because of the snowstorm (service resumed at 4 a.m. on Tuesday), and above-ground subway service in the city was also suspended.

Blizzard-like conditions resulted in hazardous road conditions and flights at John F. Kennedy International Airport were grounded. Nassau Inter-County Express/NICE Bus suspended all service on Monday as well. Full service will resume on Wednesday, officials said on Feb. 2.

The Hewlett-Woodmere and Lawrence public schools were closed on Monday and Tuesday. Lawrence had teachers post assigned work and work reviews on Feb. 1 and had remote instruction on Feb. 2.

On Monday, snowplowing in Cedarhurst and Lawrence was helped by residents moving their vehicles off the streets and not shoveling snow back into those same streets and hampered by the high winds that created drifts and resulted in having to plow the same area multiple times.

Lawrence officials had up to 16 trucks plowing, while Cedarhurst sent out three trucks at 1 a.m. on Feb. 1 and three more three hours later, along with four people on shovels and snowblowers to combat the snow. Cedarhurst Mayor Benjamin Weinstock reported slippery roads on Monday. After the snow stopped on Monday night, the village salted the roads.

In Atlantic Beach, Mayor George Pappas drove around the village and declared the roads in good shape on Monday. Also superintendent of Sanitary District 1, he added that service was grounded on Monday and resumed on Tuesday.