At least around Albany, NY.
I’ve been living here for 60-some years, and do not remember a winter when I did not have to shovel snow.
Until now.
Temperature records date back to the 1820s. This winter (December, January, February) the average temp of 33.4 is 0.7 higher than the previous record high in 1931-32, and 7.8 higher than normal.
Snow records date back to the 1880s. So far, there’s been 10.3 inches (none of which required shoveling, since it melted the next day), lowest since then, and way below the last-30-year average of 43.8 inches.
We’ve had more rain than normal, of course, and a couple of local flooding situations.
From personal observation, the Hudson River has been mostly open water, with just a few days of some ice. Back before refrigeration, harvesting ice on the river was a local business.
This could be normal weather variation, but I doubt it.
Climate change brings weather extremes, and this is the most extreme non-winter ever around here.
Hopefully we will elect people this year who will do something about it.