Winter Storm Orlena Causes Major Flooding, Damages Homes
Disaster Alert
February 3, 2021
Source: The Weather Channel
Additional Resource:
Previous Reporting (California Flooding, Mudslides)
Approximate location (according to media outlets) sustaining structural damage:
Massachusetts
– Sandwich (Barnstable County, 02563)
*Severe home damage reported on Salt Marsh Road (addresses: 100, 112, 114)
Michigan
– Algonac (St. Clair County, 48001)
– East China Township (St. Clair County, 48054)
– Marine City (St. Clair County, 48039)
At a Glance
- Orlena got its start by hammering the mountain West, including the Sierra.
- It then blanketed the Midwest, including Chicago, the final weekend of January.
- Then Orlena buried parts of the Northeast in over 2 feet of snow.
Winter Storm Orlena hammered parts of the mountain West, Midwest and Northeast with heavy snow and strong winds from late January into early February.
Orlena began its cross-country journey in California as an atmospheric-river fueled Pacific storm wrung out feet of snow in the Sierra and other parts of the West, along with flooding rain. For full details on this part of the storm, click here.
Orlena then tracked into the Midwest over the final weekend of January.
Before Orlena’s Midwest snow kicked into gear on Jan. 30, over 100 million Americans were covered by a National Weather Service winter storm watch, warning or winter weather advisory in the Midwest and Northeast.
Chicago’s O’Hare airport picked up 10.8 inches of snowfall from Jan. 30-31. Combined with Winter Storm Nathaniel, it was Chicago’s snowiest week in almost 6 years, according to the National Weather Service.
Parts of the Milwaukee metro area saw 8 to 10 inches of snow, making this their snowiest January in 16 years.
A corridor of northern Indiana from the northwest Indiana suburbs of Chicago to Fort Wayne picked up 8 to 10 inches of snow.
Beginning on Jan. 31, snow spread into the Mid-Atlantic states, then intensified that night into Feb. 1.
For full report, please click the source link above.