Welcome to Tuesday morning and the 2014 New York City Winter Olympics.
Todayâs events include puddle-jumping, sidewalk skating and synchronized slush-splash avoidance.
Another storm is coming late tonight, but meanwhile, hereâs whatâs happening.
- On the roads, look out for slick spots and reduced speed limits â" 25 miles an hour on many bridges. But things could be worse.
- Temperatures rising into the mid-30s under sunny skies should melt lingering road ice, but not melt so much snow that we see flooding. For details see âCommuteâ section below.
- For pedestrians, things may be less fun. The ankle-deep gloptraps that materialized on street corners Monday froze into little moonscapes overnight.
- Depending on when you leave the house, they will either be frozen and treacherous or sloppy and treacherous. All-terrain footwear is in order.
- Schools are open as usual in the city, but some suburban districts are opening late. See list.
- Alternate-side parking is suspended again.
- Toward midnight, snow, sleet and freezing rain will start anew and fall through much of Wednesday.
- If it turns out to be mostly snow, there could be quite a bit â" up to 8 inches in the city, more north and west.
- If icy stuff predominates, we could see downed branches, wires, trees and a nightmarish commute.
- And since no Olympics is complete without a marathon, more snow is possible all weekend long.
- Oh, and a brief look back at yesterday: the 8 inches of snow in Central Park set a record for Feb. 3. Gold medal!
Hereâs what else you need to know.
COMMUTE
Subways: Check latest status.
Rails: Check L.I.R.R., Metro-North or New Jersey Transit status.
Roads: Check traffic map or radio report on the 1s or the 8s.
COMING UP TODAY
- Mayor de Blasio makes an announcement at City Hall at 9 a.m. Watch livecast.
- Then the mayor joins Hillary Rodham Clinton for the East Harlem kickoff of a child-welfare initiative run by the Clintonsâ foundation and the Spanish-language TV network Univision. The City Council speaker, Melissa Mark-Viverito, will be there, too.
- A show of unpublished 1964 photos of the Beatles, put on by the gallery Rock Paper Photo, opens at Gallery 151 on West 18th Street. 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. [Free, R.S.V.P.]
- Designers, makers and sellers of pajamas and underwear will be honored at the Underfashion Clubâs âFemmy Awardsâ at Cipriani 42nd Street tonight.
- For more events, see The New York Times Arts & Entertainment guide.
IN THE NEWS
- Philip Seymour Hoffmanâs death highlighted the resurgence of cheap heroin in the city. [New York Times]
- State Senator John Sampson of Brooklyn was indicted again, this time on charges related to his secret ownership stake in a liquor store. [Politicker]
- Mayor de Blasio bragged about his Che Guevara posters, pizza knife prowess and plans to inflict locusts on the Upper East Side on âThe Daily Show With Jon Stewart.â [New York Times]
- In a radio interview, Gov. Chris Christie revived the idea that the George Washington Bridge lane closings began as a legitimate traffic study. [CBS News]
- Super Bowl Boulevard was a bust for the Broadway theater industry. [Associated Press]
- An elderly man was killed by a private operatorâs snowplow in Brighton Beach, Brooklyn. [NBC New York]
- Scoreboard: Knicks bow to Bucks, 101-98. Nets nip Sixers, 108-102. Avalanche over Devils, 2-1 in overtime.
Joseph Burgess and Annie Correal contributed reporting.
New York Today is a morning roundup that stays live from 6 a.m. till late morning.
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