jfudo,
I think that the change in ground snow load may be due to inaccuracy in the way the old snow loads were obtained. Prior to adopting the IBC, New York had its own unique building code that wasn't based on ANSI, ASCE, UBC, BOCA, etc. The old snow loads were originally presented not as ground snow loads, but as roof snow loads, and they were in use for many decades. When NY adopted the 2000 IBC in 2003, they had to take their old roof snow load values and convert them so they could be used with IBC and ASCE 7. They did this by dividing the roof snow loads by 0.7 to get to ground snow loads.
I believe the ground snow loads in the 2007 NY building code (based on the 2003 IBC) are based on more recent studies of snow loads in NY. I just use them and don't try to get back to the older values, which were generally higher than in the current code. I read this somewhere byt can't remember where.