Bitter temperatures flirted with record lows on Sunday as “life-threatening” conditions put millions across the country in a deep freeze for Valentine’s Day.
More than 38 million people from the Plains into the Midwest and East Coast were under winter-storm warnings or advisories overnight, according to The Weather Channel.
The coldest air mass of the winter brought the thermometer down to minus 6 degrees overnight in Minneapolis, while New Yorkers were urged to take “extreme precautions” against wind chill.
“These temperatures can be life threatening — especially for seniors, infants and people with medical conditions,” New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio warned.
Forecasters warned Sunday morning will likely to be the coldest for many — with New England feeling the deepest chill.
“Stay indoors if you can,” Weather Channel lead meteorologist Michael Palmer said. “With these type of temperatures you can get frostbite within a matter of minutes.”
He said parts of New England will see “bitterly cold” wind-chill factors of 40 below zero, with air-surface temperatures also below zero for much of the Northeast.
New York City could get wind-chill factor of 20 below zero while upstate New York could experience wind chill of 50 below zero, he said.
Several cities had already set record lows as of 4:45 a.m. ET: Boston and Providence both hit minus 9, while Hartford hit minus 10 and Worcester, Massachusetts hit minus 15, according to the National Weather Service.
As of 4:45 AM Records as follows: Boston -9F, Providence -9F, Worcester -15F, Hartford (Bradley) -10F
— NWS Boston (@NWSBoston) February 14, 2016
In New York, Central Park’s reading of minus one broke a record there, too.
The National Weather Service issued a wind chill warning for the entire state of Connecticut for Saturday night into Sunday morning.
All six of our major climate sites either broke or tied a record this morning! #ArcticBlast pic.twitter.com/1FHN9EpRqb
— NWS New York NY (@NWSNewYorkNY) February 14, 2016
Air temperatures there are expected to tumble into the double-digits below zero in the hills and wind chills are expected to remain near 30 below zero, according to NBC Connecticut.









