It wasn't a blockbuster storm, but many communities in Massachusetts find themselves clearing snow that fell Sunday into Monday.
The National Weather Service is reporting the following snow totals in Central Massachusetts: Grafton: 6.8 inches (as of 5 a.m.) Westborough: 6.2 inches (as of 4:42 a.m.) Sutton: 5.8 inches (as of 5 a.m.) Douglas: 5.5 inches (as of 4:54 a.m.) Charlton: 5 inches (as of 5:11 a.m.)
A winter storm barreled into Massachusetts Sunday, bringing measurable snowfall across the Bay State. Some snowflakes were still falling as of around 6:45 a.m. Monday, but National Weather Service forecasters expect the precipitation to stop by daybreak.
Meteorologists are predicting “plowable snowfall” across Massachusetts from Sunday night into Monday morning, as a nor’easter is expected to dump 3 to 6 inches of snow.
Counties across Massachusetts could see up to 10 inches of snow on Sunday, according to the National Weather Service.
Massachusetts could see several inches of snow this weekend from a weather system passing over the region on Sunday night, according to the latest forecast from the National Weather Service's Boston office.
An arctic blast is set to bring wind chill temperatures as low as single digits below zero in Massachusetts. Meteorologists tell us how to prepare.
The region could see several inches of snow this long weekend, and communities are preparing with parking bans. Here's a running list.
A report from the National Weather Service was issued on Monday at 5:05 p.m. for snow squalls and showers until 6 p.m. for Franklin, Hampshire and Hampden counties.
The region could see several inches of snow this long weekend, and communities are preparing with parking bans. Here's a running list.
A NWS forecaster said Massachusetts will see at most two inches of snowfall from the storm this weekend. Most parts of the state, including Worcester, Boston and the South Shore, are expected to get less than an inch of snow.
Many are waking up to snow as a Sunday night storm brought several inches of snow to many Massachusetts communities.