AP/ February 9, 2013, 11:22 PM

New Yorkers tell of hours stranded on snowy roads

With tears in her eyes, Pirscilla Arena, 41, from Mount Sinai, N.Y., reads letters she wrote to her two children as she spent the night in her car on North Ocean Avenue in Farmingville after the car got stuck in the snow while she was traveling home after work during yesterday's snow storm. Arena was at the Brookhaven Town Hall after being rescued by a N.Y. State Trooper on Saturday, Feb. 9, 31, 2013 in , N.Y.

With tears in her eyes, Pirscilla Arena, 41, from Mount Sinai, N.Y., reads letters she wrote to her two children as she spent the night in her car on North Ocean Avenue in Farmingville after the car got stuck in the snow while she was traveling home after work during yesterday's snow storm. Arena was at the Brookhaven Town Hall after being rescued by a N.Y. State Trooper on Saturday, Feb. 9, 31, 2013 in , N.Y. / AP Photo/Kathy Kmonicek

FARMINGVILLE, N.Y. Stranded for hours on a snow-covered road, Priscilla Arena prayed, took out a sheet of loose-leaf paper and wrote what she thought might be her last words to her husband and children.

She told her 9 1/2-year-old daughter, Sophia, she was "picture-perfect beautiful." And she advised her 5 ?-year-old son, John: "Remember all the things that mommy taught you. Never say you hate someone you love. Take pride in the things you do, especially your family. ... Don't get angry at the small things; it's a waste of precious time and energy. Realize that all people are different, but most people are good. "

"My love will never die — remember, always," she added.

Arena, who was rescued in an Army canvas truck after about 12 hours, was one of hundreds of drivers who spent a fearful, chilly night stuck on highways in a blizzard that plastered New York's Long Island with more than 30 inches of snow, its ferocity taking many by surprise despite warnings to stay off the roads.

Even plows were mired in the snow or blocked by stuck cars, so emergency workers had to resort to snowmobiles to try to reach motorists. Four-wheel-drive vehicles, tractor-trailers and a couple of ambulances could be seen stranded along the roadway and ramps of the Long Island Expressway. Stuck drivers peeked out from time to time, running their cars intermittently to warm up as they waited for help.

With many still stranded hours after the snow stopped, Gov. Andrew Cuomo urged other communities to send plows to help dig out in eastern Long Island, which took the state's hardest hit by far in the massive Northeast storm.

In Connecticut, where the storm dumped more than 3 feet of snow in some places, the National Guard rescued about 90 stranded motorists, taking a few to hospitals with hypothermia.

61 Photos

Powerful blizzard descends on Northeast

The scenes came almost exactly two years after a blizzard marooned at least 1,500 cars and buses on Chicago's iconic Lake Shore Drive, leaving hundreds of people shivering in their vehicles for as long as 12 hours and questioning why the city didn't close the crucial thoroughfare earlier.

Cuomo and other officials were similarly asked why they didn't act to shut down major highways in Long Island in advance of the storm, especially given the sprawling area's reputation for gridlock. The expressway is often called "the world's longest parking lot."

"The snow just swallowed them up. It came down so hard and so fast," explained Suffolk County Executive Steven Bellone.

"That's not an easy call," added Cuomo, who noted that people wanted to get home and that officials had warned them to take precautions because the worst of the snow could start by the evening rush hour. Flashing highway signs underscored the message ahead of time: "Heavy Snow Expected. Avoid PM Travel!"

"People need to act responsibly in these situations," Cuomo said.

But many workers didn't have the option of taking off early Friday, Arena noted. The 41-year-old sales account manager headed home from an optical supply business in Ronkonkoma around 4 p.m. She soon found her SUV stuck along a road in nearby Farmingville.

"Even though we would dig ourselves out and push forward, the snow kept piling, and therefore we all got stuck, all of us," she recalled later at Brookhaven Town Hall, where several dozen stranded motorists were taken after being rescued. Many others opted to stay with their cars.

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Getting travel back to normal after blizzard

Richard Ebbrecht left his Brooklyn chiropractic office around 3 p.m. for his home in Middle Island, about 60 miles away, calculating that he could make the drive home before the worst of the blizzard set in. He was wrong.

As the snow came rushing down faster than he'd foreseen, he got stuck six or seven times on the expressway and on other roads. Drivers began helping each other shovel and push, he said, but to no avail. He finally gave up and spent the night in his car on a local thoroughfare, only about two miles from his home.

"I could run my car and keep the heat on and listen to the radio a little bit," he said.

He walked home around at 8 a.m., leaving his car.

Late-shifters including Wayne Jingo had little choice but to risk it if they wanted to get home. By early afternoon, he'd been stuck in his pickup truck alongside the Long Island Expressway for nearly 12 hours.

He'd left his job around midnight as a postal worker at Kennedy Airport and headed home to Medford, about 50 miles east. He was at an exit in Ronkonkoma — almost home — around 1:45 a.m. when another driver came barreling at him westbound, the wrong way, he said. Jingo swerved to avoid the oncoming car, missed the exit and ended up stuck on the highway's grass shoulder.

He rocked the truck back and forth to try to free it, but it only sank down deeper into the snow and shredded one of his tires. He called 911. A police officer came by at 9:30 a.m. and said he would send a tow truck.

At 1 p.m. Saturday, Jingo was still waiting.

"I would have been fine if I didn't have to swerve," he said.

In Middle Island, a Wal-Mart remained unofficially open long past midnight to accommodate more than two dozen motorists who were stranded on nearby roads.

"We're here to mind the store, but we can't let people freeze out there," manager Jerry Greek told Newsday.

Officials weren't aware of any deaths among the stranded drivers, Cuomo said. Suffolk County police said no serious injuries had been reported among stuck motorists, but officers were still systematically checking stranded vehicles late Saturday afternoon.

While the expressway eventually opened Saturday, about 30 miles of the highway was to be closed again Sunday for snow removal.

Susan Cassara left her job at a Middle Island day care center around 6:30 p.m., after driving some of the children home because their parents couldn't get there to pick them up.

She got stuck on one road until about 2:30 a.m. Then a plow helped her get out — but she got stuck again, she said. Finally, an Army National Guardsman got to her on a snowmobile after 4 a.m.

"It was so cool. Strapped on, held on and came all the way here" to the makeshift shelter at the Brookhaven Town Hall, she said. "Something for my bucket list."

© 2013 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
24 Comments Add a Comment
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LarryMoniz says:
Absolutely amazing. With a week of warning it was going to be a "bad storm" New Yorkers demonstrated, once again, that they are eminently lacking in the reality check department. I was raised in New England back before weather satellites and radar, when severe weather warnings could be a matter hours rather than a week. Yet, most New Englanders took the attitude that it was better to leave work early or not go in at than risk their lives in a skidding accident or freezing to death in a marooned vehicle. And most had far better slippery-weather-driving capabilities. I worked in Manhattan for nearly 15 years and don't understand the New York mentality in which people feel they have special privilege denied others.
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3sophia1john says:
It's really such a shame there are such haters in this country. After all we are all just people trying to live day to day. I live right here in the area of that snow storm. There are no motels nearby. I am retired but I worked my entire life for a boss that would never let me leave early due to weather. This storm was monumental. Instead of criticizing,one should be kind, one should be understanding, one should be grateful they did not have to endure. Mostly though they should not judge---just hope it never happens to you!!!!!
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Wowsers789 says:
if you have to go to work:

pack food and water in your vehicle
dress warmly
if possible, make hotel reservations near the office
keep fresh batteries in your vehicle
buy a battery charger for your cell phone

better yet, stay home.
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Wowsers789 says:
these people should have stayed at home. in their selfishness, they not only endangered their lives but those of emergency workers as well.
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JimmyKick says:
Did this lady think about packing a couple of blankets? Jesus should have filled her in on this tick.
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JimmyKick replies:
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*r
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JimmyKick says:
My Jeep would have made it.
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davycoolguy says:
Another that prayed...blah blah blah. I always crack up when I hear about this stuff. What about when people pray and they do not get rescued? What about when people pray for a loved one and they die anyway? It is such crap and their god always gets a pass.
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PMac13 replies:
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You should show some respect for people, even if they don't believe as you do. If you can't do that, you should keep your hateful vile to yourself. You're comment indicates self-righteousness and tragically misguided self-importance.
WiseAsOwl replies:
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Yeah, Davy... It so happens that I believe that all atheists should be terminated... Whadaya think of that??? You don't have to agree with folks... but you should be polite...
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robert1129 says:
I am a TX small business owner. Had I been located in this area, I would have let my folks off early enough to get home. I would have also given them the option of staying in the office area until it was safe to go home. In the latter event, common sense prevails and I would have sent out for pizza, coffee, blankets, whatever makes sense but no booze.
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democracy8 says:
To all those who feel so free to criticize: what would YOU do if your boss refused to let you out early? Contrary to what a previous poster claimed, NY IS an "employment-at-will" state, which means that you can be fired for just about any reason.
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democracy8 replies:
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And if none of those places are nearby? What then, Mr Smartass?
mark648 replies:
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Ever hear about snow tires? What a bunch of whiny liberals!
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123-cbsnews says:
Think more about it, each winter with a 100% travel job, sooner or later you end up in a storm driving at five to ten miles an hour for nine hours to drive 50 or 60 miles home. It just happens, you fill your gas tank, hope you can continue to keep tank full, just a terrible experience. Most of the drama is the number of people, tri-state (CT, NY, NJ) is notorious for rush hours (3-4 hours) already, they can't handle strong storms, and you already have to drive at odd hours just to go anywhere across several states. I drove after midnight for more than twenty years, during a snow storm, "hell no". Take some personal responsibility, all of this was predictable.
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