Most forecast models show the wintry mix arriving tomorrow, picking up around the AM rush hour. Check out your forecast here:
Preparations are underway as an arctic blast dives into the nation's interior and southern regions and pushes a snowstorm into the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast that will be followed by lethal cold.
Over 175 million people across the country are under some form of cold weather alert as the mid-Atlantic and Northeast ready for another round of rain and snow and southern states brace for frigid temperatures and rare snowfall. The cold comes on the tail ...
After a looming snowstorm hits the Tri-State Area on Sunday, arctic air is expected to chill New York City and the surrounding areas. According to a post on the National Weather Service’s X account, the National Weather Service is warning that there might be significant impacts on infrastructure and public health.
The National Weather Service has issued a winter weather advisory for the Sacramento area until Sunday at 4 p.m., with wind gusts up to 55 mph and a 70% chance of rain, and the Placerville area expecting 4 to six inches of snow.
New York’s being hit by an arctic polar vortex, making temperatures drop hard overnight after a snow storm hit on Sunday.
Connecticut will see a warming trend over the weekend that will last until Thursday, when frigid temperatures should return, National Weather Service says.
Temperatures on Wednesday are forecast to struggle to make it above 20 degrees. However, on Thursday, New York City residents can expect some relief as temperatures are expected to jump up to a high of 30 degrees. Friday is slated for a high of 32 degrees and Saturday is expected to reach a peak temperature around 33-34 degrees, as noted by Dombek.
A massive surge of Pacific moisture will drop up to 60 inches of snow in the western mountains of Wyoming between Friday and Sunday. The rest of
Following a dry January that resulted in a rare slew of bluebird days in the Flathead Valley, a storm is expected to bring “complicated” conditions to the region in the form of fluctuating temperatures combined with potential freezing rain and snow,
A blast of Arctic air is set to push into the Pacific Northwest this weekend, bringing plunging temperatures, mountain snow, and the potential for lowland snowfall in some areas, meteorologists say. According to Michael Snyder of the Pacific Northwest Weather Watch,
St. Paul hit 52 degrees on Thursday, a record for Jan. 30, though temperatures are expected to drop as a cold front comes through in the evening. The Twin Cities’ previous Jan. 30 record of 48 degrees happened in 1879 and 1989.