Terry Allen shovels snow off the roof of his home on North Avenue in West Seneca on Thursday.
Lancaster was one of the hardest hit areas. A resident is seen snowblowing waist-deep snow near his home.
Terry Allen shovels snow off the roof of his home on North Avenue in West Seneca on Thursday.
Terry Allen shovels snow off the roof of his home on North Avenue in West Seneca on Thursday.
Bethann Casey retrieves some items from her snow-buried car in South Buffalo on Thursday. The area was hit over the last three days with historic amounts of snow, preventing residents from getting to work and disrupting their daily routine.
This snow pile can be seen reaching almost to the roof of a two-story building on Seneca Street in South Buffalo. Crews worked as fast as they could to load it into trucks to be shipped out of the neighborhood.
Cars remain buried on Seneca Street in South Buffalo, Thursday, Nov. 20, 2014. (Derek Gee/Buffalo News)
The third storm day in November brings more stories of creativity, kindness and perseverance among those still digging out. And it brings ongoing insight into what people consider the basics of living.
Bethann Casey retrieves some items from her snow-buried car in South Buffalo on Thursday. The area was hit over the last three days with historic amounts of snow, preventing residents from getting to work and disrupting their daily routine.
This snow pile can be seen reaching almost to the roof of a two-story building on Seneca Street in South Buffalo. Crews worked as fast as they could to load it into trucks to be shipped out of the neighborhood.