Photo by Donnie Weatherhead

After Jonas brought the East Coast to an icy standstill, left thousands without power, and 20 dead, according to NBC4, the worst of the wintry weather is over—for the foreseeable future.

Those shoveling their livelihoods out of the snow this afternoon will do so with a high of 32 degrees and wind between 9 to 13 mph, according to the National Weather Service. Tonight, we’ll have mostly clear skies with a low of 11 degrees, and calmer winds between 5 to 7 mph.

Tomorrow, we’ll break above freezing with highs near 36 degrees, and a low around 30 tomorrow night. Tuesday could bring showers (about a 30 percent chance), but temperatures will rise almost ten more degrees. The rest of the week will alternate between cloudy and sunny skies with the highest temperature at 45 on Saturday. Tuesday night is likely to see rain, and Wednesday may also seem some showers, according to the Capital Weather Gang.

And ICYMI, snowfall totals are kind of in: Reagan National Airport received 17.8 inches, the Capital Weather Gang reports. This ties as D.C.’s 4th greatest total on record with Snowmageddon in February 2010. However, the Capital Weather Gang learned that “the airport observers did not follow National Weather Service observing guidelines,” so that number isn’t solidified just yet.

So far, D.C. schools are cancelled for tomorrow, and updates are still to come on when Metro and the city government will reopen.