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An intense lake-effect snow squall battered western New York as aircraft approached local airports, creating near-zero visibility conditions and hazardous travel across Genesee County and surrounding areas. Dramatic video from Pembroke, New York, shows snow driven sideways by winds reaching up to 45 miles per hour, turning open landscapes into whiteout corridors within minutes.
The footage, captured on January 21, 2026, highlights classic lake-effect conditions as Arctic air surged across the relatively warmer waters of Lake Ontario. The temperature contrast fueled narrow but extremely powerful snow bands capable of producing rapid accumulations and sudden visibility collapse, posing serious risks to drivers and air traffic alike.
Witnesses reported visibility dropping to just a few feet as the squall intensified, with snow falling at rates fast enough to overwhelm road crews and aviation operations. Pilots navigating final approach were forced to contend with rapidly shifting visibility, turbulence, and heavy snowfall concentrated within tightly defined bands.
Nearby communities including Angola and Eden reported storm totals of two to four feet in localized areas, underscoring the highly uneven yet destructive nature of lake-effect events. Meteorologists warn that such squalls can intensify without warning, making travel especially dangerous even when conditions appear manageable just miles away.
Officials urged motorists to avoid unnecessary travel during active lake-effect bands, noting that whiteout conditions and flash-freeze risks can lead to sudden pileups and emergency situations. Forecasters emphasized that while lake-effect snow is common in the region, the combination of wind speed, snowfall intensity, and rapid onset made this event particularly dangerous.
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