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Record-breaking Buffalo snow event
Last Post 21 Oct 2006 03:08 PM by Malvi Lennon. 8 Replies.
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Lee NorwoodUser is Offline
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14 Oct 2006 02:05 AM  
This is intended as a thread to track developments in the aftermath of this unusual weather event; heavy snow while the trees are still in full leaf, etc.
Lee Norwood, aka "CATdawg"
Gale HawkinsUser is Offline
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14 Oct 2006 06:23 AM  

Lee I read tonight one local said it looked like a war zone.

http://apnews.myway.com/article/20061013/D8KO0EN80.html

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - Buffalo lay all but paralyzed Friday after a record-breaking early snowstorm whited out the brilliant colors of fall, buried pumpkins and apples and caught this city famous for its wintry weather flat-flooted. At least three deaths were blamed on the storm....

 

Rob BanksUser is Offline
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14 Oct 2006 04:14 PM  
Will likely be some work out of this one.
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Steve EbnerUser is Offline
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14 Oct 2006 05:33 PM  

I am a native of Erie, PA, a mere 90 miles down the Lake Erie coastline from Buffalo.  It is not unusual for two feet of lake effect snow to fall overnight.  You go to bed with no snow and wake up to a beautiful world of white, glad you are inside looking out rather than outside freezing in it.  I've even driven a taxi through the night as the snow piled higher and deeper and I slipped down the street trying to get people where they needed to go. 

The Jews have a saying:  When leaving a good friend it is often said, "Hashanah Hashanei Byerushalem."  (My transliteration may be a bit off.  I haven't written or spoken in Hebrew in many years)  It means "Next year in Jerusalem."  Some of us for whom freeze claims can be our bread and butter some years sometimes say upon parting, "Next year in Buffalo." 

I hate to disappoint the hopeful, but ...  It is probably not likely that this storm will produce much work.  The conditions are wrong for both frozen pipes and ice dam formation.  Heavy snowfalls usually occur at about 32 degrees Fahrenheit.  That this was the case with this one is indicated by the fact that it almost immediately started melting.  Pipes generally have some insulation and do not freeze and burst until the temperature gets well below freezing.  Ice dams require a period of  time after a heavy snowfall when the temperature go down around zero or below, followed by a thaw.

If there is work to be had from this one, it is more likely to be from the winds that apparently were attendant upon this storm.  There may also be an occasional large limb on a home.

Buffalo may have been taken by surprise by the earliness of the storm, but take my word for it that Buffalo knows how to recover quickly from a snowstorm.

Steve Ebner

"With great power comes great responsibility." (Stanley Lieber, Amazing Fantasy # 15 August 1962)
Jason AdleUser is Offline
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14 Oct 2006 08:42 PM  
Actually we have been called out and have been handed our first batch of claims already. Brother-in-law who lives in Buffalo area says that it looks like a bomb went off. Hope to see some of you there.
Michael ClarkUser is Offline
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14 Oct 2006 10:40 PM  
Just got the call as well. Should be fun trying to get to Buff. 16 + hour drive from Mobile. Hope everyone stays safe!
Mike KunzeUser is Offline
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15 Oct 2006 07:16 AM  

Went thru a similar situation in Omaha, 10/17/97, as a staffer.   Tons of trees down due to leaf presence.  Power outages galore, lots of fence damage & dwelling damage particularly in the older neighborhoods where overhead lines still were the norm from the alley to the house.  Lines pulled, meters jerked off the back of the houses, a few fires, lots of spoilage & ALE claims.  Of course, it all depends on the carrier and what bells & whistles are on the policy.  The carrier I was staff for had some of these extra coverages.  It was generally a pretty slow time of year for most carriers, so my company sent in staff guys from several other states to help us local guys out.  No independents got involved.

That scenario will never occur in Omaha again, since all those big old trees are gone or trimmed, and the power lines now go in underground almost everywhere.  Could be the same case in Buffalo already.          

Thomas GuarinoUser is Offline
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15 Oct 2006 01:43 PM  
I live in Rochester NY, about 45 mins from buffalo... Our local news is showing some heavy damage in Buffalo, and also saying there will be a lot of flooding. I might take a drive to Buffalo today and see how bad it looks.

I would love to get some work out of this snowstorm, and I’m on a bunch of company’s rosters, but no calls yet. Any idea’s on what company’s to contact?
Malvi LennonUser is Offline
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21 Oct 2006 03:08 PM  

We got a call yesterday from WPS they wanted us in Buffalo today we could not accept the deployment because of other work but you may want to give them a call.

Malvi

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