Snow is coming down in New York City, with the worst expected until at least 2 p.m.

Most areas are likely to see 3 inches of snow. Read the full forecast here.

So far, we're seeing some power outages across the city. Queens has been hit particularly hard, more than 1,300 customers are without power. They're joined by 120 customers in Brooklyn, and 76 in the Bronx.

Manhattan and Staten Island appear spared for the most part right now, with just one or two customers in the dark.

The storm is also causing disruptions at LaGuardia Airport.

This is the second time in a week that sanitation crews are out working to clear the roads.

Department of Sanitation officials said Saturday that they have 200,000 tons of salt on hand, and more than 2,000 department personnel ready to go. They said they pre-salted the streets before the first flakes hit Sunday morning.

Sanitation Commissioner Edward Grayson said he expects conditions to be “pretty bad.”

“Back-to-back storms are something we train for and they are a reality in February in New York,” Grayson said during a news conference Saturday. “We stand at the ready.”

The commissioner said no emergency snow laborers will be out on Sunday, but they will return Monday.

While the department doesn’t expect the storm to be as severe as the one that hit the city earlier this week, 100 additional plows will be on standby.

“We need people to stay off the roads, especially for your own safety,” Mayor Bill de Blasio said Saturday in an interview with NY1. 

When asked about trash pickup, de Blasio acknowledged the delay but said he felt good about being able to “catch up pretty quickly.”

In Manhattan, many people we spoke with said that it has been difficult to leave their apartments, as some are still snowed in, and this latest storm is adding to the mess.

“Today it been easy it’s just taking care of the previous storm supposedly the second storm is not too bad,” said Ralphie, a snow removal worker shoveling the street near Madison Square Park.

Others, though, were excited to experience yet another day of winter weather.

"We're waiting for a little bit more; I love the snow, my daughter loves the snow, we're waiting to go out in the park,” Alvaro Buran, a Hells Kitchen resident, said. "You cannot call it winter without snow, so looking forward for it."

While Monday's snowstorm shut down COVID-19 vaccine appointments across the state, that is not the case for today. Vaccination sites across the five boroughs remain open and ready to administer the shot, though two state-run sites on Long Island are closed. 

One woman showed up two hours early for her appointment in Downtown Brooklyn to make sure the snow didn't affect a day she's been eagerly awaiting.

"It's very difficult to get an appointment so as I grabbed this one, snow or shine I said I have to get it,” said Elaine Assing. "It's really difficult to get an appointment, i'm really happy to get this vaccine because I want to get started doing things, the normal way."