Good Monday morning. Itâs a cruel 21 degrees.
Though soon it will be sunny.
Todayâs expected high temperature is 31 degrees, around 20 degrees below normal for this time of year.
The last time the weather was like this was, well, around a week ago.
How can that be? It feels like itâs been nice for ages.
âWeâve been so beaten down by the cold that just a few days of warmth seems like an eternity,â offered Joey Picca, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service.
But letâs forget the past.
Weâre all wondering whether weâre about to get hit by a huge storm.
The chances weâll get walloped - by what the National Weather Service referred to as a âNorâeaster bombâ - look slim.
Weâre likely to get snow late Tuesday, but âweâre talking a couple of inches,â Mr. Picca said.
The reason is the low pressure center (read: the bomb) will drop âwell off-shore.â
Today, weâll be treated to fresh, polar air sliding down from Canada, and a very gusty morning.
Winds will die down later in the day and the sun shall shine on a shivering city.
Hereâs what else you need to know.
COMMUTE
Subways: Check latest status.
Rails: Check L.I.R.R., Metro-North or N.J. Transit status.
Roads: Check traffic map or radio report on the 1s or the 8s.
Alternate-side parking is in effect .
COMING UP TODAY
- Mayor Bill de Blasio speaks on the Brian Lehrer Show on WNYC at 10:30 a.m.
- The cityâs Police Commissioner William J. Bratton and the Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams promote community-police relations at Brooklyn Borough Hall. 5 p.m.
- Then the stateâs Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman holds a community forum at the Brooklyn Public Library. 6 p.m.
- A Malaysian human rights activist discusses âthe long-overlooked climate of repressionâ in his country at Hunter College. Noon. [Free, R.S.V.P.]
- Opening day for Sothebyâs designer showhouse, featuring objects from the auction houseâs collection arranged in six fantastical rooms.
- After 12 years as âThe Ethicist,â Randy Cohen started asking other people questions â" tonight he interviews the art critics Roberta Smith and Jerry Saltz, at the New York Academy of Art. 6:30 p.m. [Free, R.S.V.P.]
- A self-made cartographer shares her custom maps â" of personal histories, exotic travels and more. Mid-Manhattan Library. 6:30 p.m. [Free]
- Actors, including Rosie Perez, read three short plays for radio, live at the Bric House in Brooklyn. 7:30 p.m. [$15]
- Midnight special: Harlem Soul Kitchen and D.J. J.P. Biamby spin Motown, R&B & Classic Sampled songs at Shrine in Harlem. 12 a.m. [Free]
- For more events, see The New York Times Arts & Entertainment guide.
IN THE NEWS
- Mayor de Blasio struck a conciliatory tone on charter schools on Sunday. [New York Times]
- More than 100 public housing buildings will be getting new boilers, after relying on temporary boilers since Hurricane Sandy. [New York Times]
- James Rebhorn, a seasoned character actor who recently appeared in âHomeland,â died at 65. [New York Times]
- Former Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg hired many City Hall aides to join him in the mayoral afterlife. [Daily News]
- An illustrated account of a 10-year-oldâs five-day solo odyssey through New York. [New York Magazine]
- The remains of unidentified September 11th victims will be sent to the World Trade Center Museum. [NY Post]
- The company operating the Citi Bike program has neglected docking stations, according to reports. [Daily News]
Sandra E. Garcia and Andy Newman contributed reporting.
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