Albany's take:
Attention then turns to next weekend when another storm system, at
this point, looks to pass us by to the south. Deterministic
solutions, though slightly varied in the evolution of the system,
generally favor the disconnect of the northern and southern streams.
The lack of phasing of two shortwaves embedded within these flow
regimes would lead to a faster, more east-northeasterly track of a
developing surface low in the deep south which looks to become a
coastal low off the Southeast/Mid-Atlantic Coast by Saturday
afternoon. If this is to be realized, much of our region would
remain dry through the weekend, with only light snow showers
possible in the lower Mid-Hudson Valley and southwest New England.
However, if there were to be phasing of the two aforementioned
shortwaves, the track of the coastal low would be slower and shifted
farther west, giving us a potentially significant snowfall. This
isn`t out of the question being that there is still a fair amount of
lead time ahead of the system, but based on latest ensembles, the
probability for even sub-Advisory snowfall is very low.