
© NOAA/GOES-East
More than 500,000 homes and businesses in the Northeast lost power Thursday as a quickly moving "bomb cyclone" knocked down trees and electrical lines throughout the region.
The storm pushed some of the
coldest air of the season through the Northeast. Wind gusts of up to 55 mph could be felt along the coast from Maine to as far south as Cape May, N.J., and some parts of Delaware.
Towns like Duxbury, Mass., saw
homes damaged as strong gusts blew through the area forcing schools to close.
"This whole town got hit pretty hard," Duxbury Fire Capt. Rob Reardon told ABC News. "You can tell by just the amount of trees, the wires, the damage to houses. Roads are blocked, schools are shut down because school buses can't access these streets at all. We're having a difficult time trying to get to calls from one side of town to the other."
Comment: If Extinction Rebellion and Greta knew the truth about climate change, they would see that holidaying locally and walking to work isn't going to make a scrap of difference.