There not really taking about amount, but on the weather channel they were talking about the storm on Tuesday into Wednesday day and they said to except similar snow fall to today.
here is an article i found on accuweather web site
Even as many people are digging out from the "Blizzard of 2010" this weekend, and even still recovering from other snow and ice storms this winter, AccuWeather.com meteorologists are pondering the path and magnitude of the next storm.
That storm is already impacting California and much of the West this weekend with areas of heavy rain and heavy snow. The storm will reorganize over the High Plains Sunday night.
The current forecast track puts Kansas, the Texas Panhandle, Colorado and northern Oklahoma in line for substantial snow at the start of the new workweek.
Farther east, the storm will hit areas missed by the big storm Thursday into Saturday.
The new storm is forecast to spread a swath of plowable snow from this area to the southern Great Lakes, a large part of the mid-Atlantic and New England.
Strong winds will be a problem with this storm on the Plains and Midwest. The storm as a whole will be a colder system than the last. That means more snow and ice farther south in many cases.
Forecast challenges from this storm, in addition to the exact track, include the fact that there will be two centers of the storm. In between, there may be a zone with little or no precipitation.
The snowstorm will begin to intensify over the southern Plains Sunday night as frigid air plunges southward from Canada.
People from the Plains to the Midwest, Ohio Valley, Great Lakes, mid-Atlantic and New England should stay abreast of the situation.
Roadway and flight problems, school closures and cancellations, power outages and a new round of foiled plans will spread eastward with this new troublemaker.
Cities that are in or near the projected path of this winter storm include: Denver, Oklahoma City, Kansas City, St. Louis, Chicago, Minneapolis, Indianapolis, Nashville, Cincinnati, Detroit, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Buffalo, Albany, Washington, Philadelphia, New York, Hartford and Boston.
Keep checking in at AccuWeather.com for updates on the new storm.