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Weather closes U.S. government offices a second day

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Federal government agencies in the U.S. capital region will remain closed for a second day on Tuesday as residents brace for another blizzard while trying to clean up from a weekend storm that paralyzed the area with two feet (65 cm) of snow.

Another big winter storm was expected to hit the U.S. mid-Atlantic from about 5 p.m. British time on Tuesday and last through Wednesday, the National Weather Service forecast on Monday. Projected snowfall ranged from 10 to 20 inches (25 to 51 cm), it said.

The potentially crippling new storm was expected to hit other big cities along the East Coast, including Baltimore and Philadelphia, that are still digging out and extend into New Jersey and New York.

It would pile on to the 32 inches (81 cm) of snow that fell in suburban Washington in the biggest snowfall to hit the city in decades.

The Office of Personnel Management announced on Monday evening that federal government offices in the Washington area would be closed on Tuesday. Emergency employees were expected to report for work on time, but nonemergency employees were excused.

The federal government was closed on Monday, though President Barack Obama still held meetings at the White House. Schools and most businesses in the region also were shut.

Local officials in Montgomery County, Maryland, said the next storm could cause some roofs to collapse from the weight of all the snow and there could be more power outages.

In the county, about 80,000 people lost power on Saturday, and some customers still had no electricity or heat on Monday. Many schools said classes would be cancelled through Tuesday, even before the latest storm warning.

On Monday, winter sunshine bathed the nation's capital and the surrounding region, where people dug out their driveways and sidewalks, and ploughs finally started to clear streets in some residential neighbourhoods.

Bus service on Monday was limited to just a small number of routes in the Washington, D.C., area and the region's subway ran trains only on the underground portion of the system.

In New York, oil rose nearly 1 percent on Monday, after three sessions of losses, stemming from the weaker U.S. dollar, geopolitical disputes, and the cold weather.

Unusually cold weather will settle across key heating fuel consuming regions in the United States this week, after the heavy snow over the weekend and the next storm coming, forecasters said.

In Chicago, winter is wreaking havoc on the nation's livestock and energy markets and there may be at least three more weeks of cold, snowy weather.

Cold and snow blanketed much of the central United States this winter, slowing weight gain in cattle and hogs, delaying livestock sales, and increasing feed costs for producers.

The new storm might also hit the Northeast, the nation's largest market for heating fuel. The weekend blast largely bypassed that region.

(Reporting by James Vicini and David Alexander in Washington, Bob Burgdorfer in Chicago and Edward McAllister in New York, editing by Vicki Allen)

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