Weather

Mass. storm damage: Tens of thousands without power., severe train delays in Boston

The storm may bring some localized flooding — a flood watch is in effect for parts of central and western Massachusetts and southern New Hampshire

NBC Universal, Inc.

A major storm hitting Boston Wednesday was causing serious travel delays and knocked power out for thousands of people across Massachusetts.

As of about 9:15 p.m., there were under 17,000 customers without power, down from over 24,000 around 7 p.m., according to the Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency.

Also facing power issues were MBTA Commuter Rail trains that run to South Station — at Back Bay, a downed catenary wire, the line that provides power to trains, was causing significant delays to and from Boston. Adding to the problems was a disabled Amtrak train, the T said.

Separately, a downed tree near Four Corners/Geneva Station in Boston caused at least two trains on the Fairmount Line to be canceled, the MBTA said.

Fire officials in Taunton say part of the edge of a roof collapsed on Main Street, with crews removing the rest so the wind wouldn't knock it down. No one was injured.

The storm may bring some localized flooding — a flood watch is in effect for parts of central and western Massachusetts and southern New Hampshire through Thursday morning.

A satellite image showing a storm hitting the U.S. Northeast on Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024.
CIRA/NOAA
A satellite image showing a storm hitting the U.S. Northeast on Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024.

At Boston's Logan airport, inbound flights on average were delayed by more than two hours, and two dozens flights were canceled, according to FlightAware.

Steamship Authority ferries to and from Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard were canceled as well, the service said, citing heavy winds.

Contact Us