A winter storm is expected to hit the Northeast through Monday

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Get ready for Snowmageddon! The winter storm is expected to hit the Northeast on Monday and forecasters are warning upstate New Yorkers to prepare for six to ten inches of white material.

  • Snow expected to hit the Northeast through Monday with higher elevations expected to be up to 10 inches
  • Winter weather advisories have been sent to areas including northeastern Pennsylvania, upstate New York and northwestern Connecticut.
  • The snowfall may spread to larger cities, where no snow has fallen since March.

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Some states in the Northeast are expected to see their first snowfall of the season with some areas getting up to 10 inches of snow cover through Monday.

Northeastern Pennsylvania, upstate New York, northwestern Connecticut, northwestern New Jersey, New England, and western Massachusetts have received winter weather advisories as residents can expect large amounts of snow.

While snow could stick more to suburban areas of the states, upstate New York City could also see a snowpack, as well as the middle of the Hudson Valley.

Up to 10 inches of snow can also be seen at high elevations, but the Catskills of New York and the Berkshires of western Massachusetts can see up to six inches, according to Fox time.

Snow expected to hit the Northeast through Monday with higher elevations expected to be up to 10 inches

Snow expected to hit the Northeast through Monday with higher elevations expected to be up to 10 inches

Winter weather advisories have been sent to areas including northeastern Pennsylvania, upstate New York and northwestern Connecticut.

Winter weather advisories have been sent to areas including northeastern Pennsylvania, upstate New York and northwestern Connecticut.

Winter weather advisories have been sent to areas including northeastern Pennsylvania, upstate New York and northwestern Connecticut.

On Monday, residents and travelers can expect one to three inches of snow in New York, northern New Jersey, New England and northern Pennsylvania.

Conditions can lead to slippery roads, especially if snowfall reaches cities.

Rain could also turn to snow Sunday night on I-95, just north of the Big Apple.

Starting Sunday night, light snow is forecast in New York City around 10 p.m. local time through 1 a.m. Monday.

If snow does come to the Big Apple, it will be the first time the city has seen snow since March 27.

Snow in Monsey, New York was first seen this winter on Sunday.

Snow in Monsey, New York was first seen this winter on Sunday.

Snow in Monsey, New York was first seen this winter on Sunday.

Starting Sunday night, light snow is forecast in the Big Apple around 10 p.m. local time until 1 a.m. before Monday.

Starting Sunday night, light snow is forecast in the Big Apple around 10 p.m. local time until 1 a.m. before Monday.

Starting Sunday night, light snow is forecast in the Big Apple around 10 p.m. local time until 1 a.m. before Monday.

Snow in Monsey, New York was seen for the first time this winter as some areas of the state are expected to see up to three inches.

Images of the snowfall captured cars, house roofs and lawns covered with a light coating of snow.

Meanwhile, while those in the Northwest wait for the snow to arrive, the other side of the US has been hit with heavy rain and several feet of snow in the Sierra Nevada.

The storm closed mountain roads, downed trees and issued flood and avalanche warnings Saturday from the Northern California coast to Lake Tahoe.

More than 250 miles of the Sierra remained under a winter storm warning through at least early Monday from north of Reno to south of Yosemite National Park.

Up to 4 feet of snow is expected to fall by the end of the weekend in the upper elevations around Lake Tahoe, and up to 6 feet in the more remote parts of the Sierra to the north and south.