Are you there? Send your photos
Story highlights
No word on when power will be restored after Northeast snowstorm
Obama declares emergency in New Hampshire and Connecticut
New Jersey resident Becky Fisher says she moved her family to a neighbor's home
The death toll from the storm is now at 15
The freak snowstorm that pounded the eastern United States late last week, cutting power to hundreds of thousands of people, killed at least 22 people, officials said Thursday.
A massive snowfall that started Saturday downed trees and power lines, knocking out electricity to customers in various states, including Connecticut, New York and New Jersey.
New Jersey resident Becky Fisher said she moved her family to a neighbor’s home after they lost power and temperatures dropped to near freezing.
Fisher, along with her husband and their 6-month-old daughter, have camped out at the neighbor’s house in Maplewood, New Jersey, since the weekend storm coated her home in snow and knocked down trees and power lines.
“There are just pockets of those who have electricity,” Fisher said. “So we’re using our neighbors’ goodwill.
Fisher said they first lost power Saturday and were forced to relocate to her neighbor’s house the following night as temperatures dropped to just above freezing.
“Every time I call (the state’s utility provider), they say the ticket’s open,” she said. “Initially the message (of when power would be restored) was for Wednesday night, then Thursday, and now maybe Friday.
By Tuesday evening, about 195,000 New Jersey residents remained without power.
In Massachusetts, about 125,000 were in the dark while thousands also lost power in New Hampshire, Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia, according to power companies in those states.
Elsewhere, about 63,000 customers were without power in Pennsylvania and 105,000 were affected in New York.
President Barack Obama has signed an emergency declaration for New Hampshire and Connecticut, clearing the way for federal aid to supplement state and local response efforts
Authorities reported at least 15 deaths blamed on the storm, including three in Massachusetts, four in New Jersey and another four in Connecticut.
CNN’s David Ariosto and Marina Landis contributed to this report.