
The shift was nearly audible when the Massachusetts order lifting the travel ban arrived shortly after noon. Engines began to turn over once more in New Bedford. In Plymouth, pickup trucks pushed their way out of driveways that were buried in mailbox-high snowbanks. There was no sense of celebration. It seemed cautious, as though the state was treading water; it wasn’t sure it could keep.
As she stood inside the State Emergency Operations Center in Framingham, Governor Maura Healey, who had described the storm as “a doozy,” didn’t seem to be exaggerating. In many places, the snow had accumulated to a depth of two feet, and on the Outer Cape, gusts of up to 80 miles per hour had transformed the streets into dazzling white hallways. The prohibition, which applied to the counties of Barnstable, Plymouth, and Bristol, was the first since 2015. That was enough to say something. Massachusetts takes its closures seriously.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Official | Governor Maura Healey |
| Position | Governor of Massachusetts |
| Office | Massachusetts State House, Boston, MA |
| Agency | Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency (MEMA) |
| Affected Counties | Bristol, Plymouth, Barnstable |
| First Statewide Travel Ban Since | 2015 |
| Fine for Violators | $500 |
| Peak Power Outages | Approx. 290,000 customers |
| Maximum Wind Gusts | Up to 80 mph (Outer Cape) |
| Reference Website | https://www.mass.gov |
It was difficult to overlook the awkward recovery choreography when driving through Fall River the morning after the ban was lifted. At intersections, utility trucks idled, their orange lights blinking against storefronts covered in snow. Residents paused to observe passing plows scraping stubborn ice as they dragged shovels across partially cleared sidewalks while wearing bulky coats. In theory, the roads were open. However, open does not equate to normal.
Keeping non-essential vehicles off highways was a state-imposed restriction that allowed first responders, medical personnel, food delivery drivers, and utility crews to move freely. The $500 fine for violators was significant enough to draw notice. The penalty might have caused a psychological pause in addition to discouraging drivers. Individuals remained at home. And while wind continued to pound power lines, that probably allowed crews to move more quickly and restore some order.
However, lifting the ban is not a magic bullet. At the peak of the storm, about 290,000 residents were without power. Due to their coastal exposure, Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard were especially hard hit, causing fallen trees to become tangled hazards. Restoration would take days, not hours, Healey admitted. The crews were prepared. The problem was access. No executive order can alter the laws of physics, and bucket trucks cannot safely rise in hurricane-force gusts.
Comparisons to the Blizzard of ’78 seem to be more than just sentimental. Healey herself remembered that storm canceling her birthday celebration when she was seven years old. Although it’s a small, almost casual human memory, it captures a bigger picture. That is the standard by which Massachusetts evaluates its winters. How you measure snowfall, wind speed, and disruption will determine whether this one really competes with 1978. However, it feels close on an emotional level.
During the worst of it, speed limits on the Mass Pike had been lowered to 40 miles per hour. Drivers continued to move slowly, their tires crunching on compacted snow, even after the ban was lifted. It was oddly tense to watch traffic resume. Policy had not yet caught up to confidence. On the ground, economic impact is measured by hesitancy at intersections, but investors may quantify it in numerical terms, such as missed workdays or delayed shipments.
Public transportation had its own challenges. The storm’s impact on daily life was increased by school closures and reduced commuter rail service. Working remotely has evolved from a convenience to a necessity. Although it is still uncertain if storms of this magnitude will occur more frequently, towns are getting ready as though they might. Modernizing grids, strengthening infrastructure, and pruning trees that are at risk are all being discussed again, sometimes urgently.
Officials from the Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency stressed coordination while outlining cross-state utility reinforcements and National Guard assistance. Crews unloading equipment under overcast skies and parking lots full of out-of-state license plates seemed to reflect those efforts. That silent mobilization has a comforting quality. However, it also calls into question resilience. How many storms of this kind can systems withstand before stress becomes commonplace?
Restaurants cautiously reopened in downtown Brockton, their windows fogging as the heat and cold glass met. Customers in one diner discussed the fine for breaking the ban; some were amused, while others were irritated. Critiquing restrictions after the fact is simple. It’s more difficult to judge them during a storm when emergency calls are piling up, and headlights are blurred into smears due to whiteout conditions.
Although the headline about Massachusetts lifting its travel ban indicates progress, the recovery is not uniform. Generators continue to hum in some neighborhoods. Others have plow-carved snowbanks that are almost clear. It’s a dramatic contrast. It demonstrates how experience is shaped by geography, including elevation, tree density, and proximity to coastlines.
It seems likely that this storm will continue to be discussed long after the snow has melted. Because of the pause it imposed, not just because of the numbers or the outages. The roads were deserted for two days. Schedules were canceled. As the state waited for the winds to settle, it exhaled under a blanket of white.
Engines are now operating once more. Crew members are scaling poles. Gradually, schools are reopening. The prohibition has been lifted. Winter, however, isn’t. Furthermore, nobody in Massachusetts forgets that too easily.

