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  • 2
    days
    ago

    Oklahoma at risk of more tornadoes as storms threaten much of US

    Dr. Scott M. Lieberman / AP

    A pair of lightning bolts are seen striking the ground as a line of thunderstorms passes over Tyler, Texas.

    By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Thunderstorms -- bringing large hail and the chance of "a tornado or two" -- were expected to hit central and southwestern Oklahoma and parts of Texas Thursday as bad weather continued to hit the Plains.

    The National Weather Service published a map showing much of the U.S. had a “slight risk” of severe thunderstorms. The risk area extended from Texas and Florida to New England and the Great Lakes and from Texas up to Montana and Washington.

    “The activity is expected to be far less significant than the outbreak earlier this week, but hail could be particularly large in northwest Texas and western Oklahoma,” the weather service said.

    Slideshow: Tornadoes ravage Plains

    Tannen Maury / EPA

    A monster tornado hit Moore, Okla., Monday afternoon, leaving at least 24 dead.

    Launch slideshow

    Get more from weather.com

    In its outlook for Thursday posted at 1:52 a.m. ET, the weather service said that it expected that storms would develop early Thursday across northwestern Texas and into southwestern and central Oklahoma.

    “Primary threat will be very large hail. A tornado or two may also be possible especially during the early evening,” it added.

    In the Northeast, the weather service said “storms may undergo a gradual intensification” with a chance of “mainly isolated damaging wind.”

    “Any severe threat should diminish by early evening,” it said.

    Parts of Massachusetts were hit by severe storms on Wednesday evening that at one point prompted the weather service to issue a tornado warning. There were no reports of one touching down.

    Related:

    • Tornado birth: Mom endures labor as twister destroys hospital
    • Mother, infant who sought shelter in 7-Eleven among tornado victims identified
    • Oklahoma medical examiner: Cataloging the dead a 'horrific' task

    21 comments

    LynyrdSky Every year we have had storms however now every year we have the media hyping and moving this to the top of the news daily. Yes these storms are terrible and deadly and it saddens me with the loss of life. But the media loves tragedy and loves to promote it. This can be seen by the headli …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, oklahoma, tornado, featured, thunderstorms
  • 3
    days
    ago

    Tornado warning issued in Mass. as storm front marches east

     

    By Jeff Black and Ian Johnston, NBC News

    A tornado warning was issued for parts of Massachusetts on Wednesday evening as a severe weather storm capable of producing a twister was spotted on radar, forecasters said.

    The "dangerous storm" was located near Salem, or 11 miles northeast of Amherst, the National Weather Service warned.

    Residents were told to take cover. No confirmed tornado was spotted, however, and about 45 minutes later the Weather Service changed their warning in the area to one alerting of possible severe thunderstorms with the potential for damaging winds of more than 60 mph.

    The warnings were issued as the same storm front that spawned downpours and deadly tornadoes in Oklahoma marched east, forecasters said.

    An area stretching from the Appalachians into the lower Great Lakes and New England was at "slight risk" of severe thunderstorms Wednesday night into Thursday.

    Stronger and sometimes severe storms carrying gusty winds and hail were seen in southwestern Pennsylvania along the crest of the Appalachian range and into the Lower Great Lakes, according to the Weather Service.

    The areas at risk for thunderstorms included Indianapolis, Columbus, Detroit, Boston and Cleveland but also stretched into Western New York and Connecticut. 

    An earlier threat of possible isolated tornadoes farther west, in Western Ohio into the Tennessee Valley, "appears to have diminished" because of cooling from cloud cover, forecasters said.

    However at least one funnel cloud was reported in central Florida in the town of Viera, according to NBC station WESH TV. 

    The Northern Rockies area — from Northeast Wyoming through Western Montana — could also see storms with severe hail and wind, the Weather Service said.

    The Weather Channel's Jim Cantore tells Brian Williams thunderstorms are now expected from New York and Connecticut down to Tennessee.

    Get more from weather.com

    Weather.com's forecast showed a map outlining the main area of risk, which stretched from Buffalo to Charleston. It also said the main danger would be from high winds and hail, but cautioned there was a “slight risk” of tornadoes.

    "Other showers and thunderstorms are possible from the remainder of the Northeast and Great Lakes into the South," it said.

    "A few isolated severe thunderstorms producing damaging wind gusts and hail are possible in the lower Mississippi Valley. Showers and thunderstorms continue from the Northeast to the Southeast Thursday, although the severe threat is even lower," weather.com added.

    Parts of northeast Kentucky, Ohio, southeast Michigan, western Pennsylvania and western New York were given a 3 out of 10 on Weather.com's tornado probability scale, with 10 representing the highest probability of twisters. The cities of Cincinnati, Columbus, Detroit, Pittsburgh and Buffalo were all included in this risk area.

    Meanwhile, a tornado rating of 2 was given to Tennessee, most of Kentucky, much of eastern Indiana, parts of southern and eastern Michigan, eastern West Virginia, much of Pennsylvania and much of upstate New York.

    Connecticut was hit by strong storms that caused some damage in northern parts of the state on Tuesday, NBCConnecticut.com reported.

    A storm moved through Copake, New York, just before 5 p.m. and headed southeast through Massachusetts and along the extreme northwest corner of Connecticut, the station said. Downed trees and power lines were found in Falls Village and lightning strikes came close to homes in Cornwall.

    A tree fell on cars in the high school parking lot in Falls Village. "It's just a car. We're just here to make sure all the kids were safe," said Patricia Chamberlain, superintendent, whose car was among those hit.

    Thunder, lightning, high winds and hail were reported in several Conn. towns, including Salisbury, Canaan, South Windsor and Manchester.

    Related:

    • Full coverage of Oklahoma tornadoes
    • 9-year-old, 65-year-old among first tornado victims identified
    • Before and after: Tornado cuts devastating path through Oklahoma

    29 comments

    Nature, as in weather events, earthquakes, tidal waves, and any of the myriad other "things" possible, were around long before "man" walked the earth and will blow the dust of man around long after our species ceases to exist. Do and be the best you can, and enjoy what you have for the miniscule amo …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, storms, tornadoes, hail, featured, thunderstorms
  • 7
    days
    ago

    Plains states on edge under tornado watches

    Tornado watches are already in effect until late Saturday for parts of Nebraska, Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas. And forecasters say this violent storm system could stretch into the Midwest Sunday. The Weather Channel's Kim Cunningham reports.

    By Gil Aegerter, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Large sections of the Plains states came under tornado watches Saturday as a wave of storms swept through.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The greatest threat late Saturday was in eastern Kansas and Oklahoma, weather.com reported, with central Oklahoma seeing a spike on Sunday.

    But Weather Channel meteorologist Michael Palmer said the storms on Sunday afternoon and evening were likely to carry a greater chance of tornadoes and the danger will be present into Monday.

    The National Weather Service issued a tornado watch for most of western and central Kansas until 11 p.m. CDT, NBC station KSNW of Wichita reported. Early Saturday evening, a Weather Service tornado warning was in effect for an area north of Dodge City, Kansas, that included Ellis, Ness, Rush and Trego counties.


    The storms are being generated by a dip in the jet stream combined with moisture moving north from the Gulf of Mexico, Kim Cunningham of The Weather Channel reported on NBC Nightly News (see the video above).

    The danger follows a series of tornadoes that struck northern Texas on Wednesday night, leaving six people dead and dozens injured. One of the twisters was preliminarily classified EF-4 by the National Weather Service, meaning it could have had winds up to 200 miles per hour.

    Overall, tornadic activity has been slow this May, typically a bad month for twisters, said the Weather Channel’s Tom Moore.

    NBC News staff writer Matthew DeLuca contributed to this report.

    Related story: Storm warning: Weekend could turn nasty 

    8 comments

    lets hope everyone stays safe

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, oklahoma, kansas, nebraska, storms, tornadoes, thunderstorms
  • 17
    May
    2013
    10:33am, EDT

    Severe thunderstorms, tornadoes threaten Plains over the weekend

    Severe storm warnings have been issued for parts of Nebraska and Kansas, and the storm could spread to Oklahoma City by early Monday. Residents are bracing for heavy downpours and potentially strong winds. TODAY's Dylan Dreyer reports.

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The start of tornado season was late but deadly, and now severe weather with the potential for twisters threatens parts of the Plains and Midwest -- including major cities -- heading into the weekend, forecasters said.

    Severe thunderstorms looked likely to build over the Plains through the weekend and into Monday. There is some chance of tornadoes developing, the channel said, as moist air from the Gulf of Mexico meets a jet stream moving eastward from the Rocky Mountains.

    Late afternoon thunderstorms were expected to move in over Oklahoma City and Kansas City on Sunday, Weather Channel meteorologist Michael Palmer said. More severe thunderstorms were predicted to build over St. Louis and Springfield, Mo. on Monday, he reported.

    Millions of Americans in the Central Plains need to be on the alert for dangerous storms this weekend. Sunday is expected to bring the most severe weather. The Weather Channel's Mike Seidel reports.

    As many as 16 tornadoes struck northern Texas on Wednesday evening, leveling homes in the towns of Granbury and Cleburne and claiming the lives of six adults. One of the twisters was preliminarily classified EF-4 by the National Weather Service, meaning its winds reached speeds of 160 to 200 miles per hour.

    Overall, tornadic activity has been slow this May, typically the month when twisters do some of their worst damage, said the Weather Channel’s Tom Moore.

    “We’ve had a shortened season, so to speak,” Moore said, mostly due to blasts of cold air that brought a late chill to central parts of the country.

    Any twisters that develop over the Plains on Saturday are likely to form in remote regions, but the foul weather could move closer to cities on Sunday, covering a wide swath from Oklahoma City and Tulsa to Joplin, Mo., and Springfield, Mo.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    “I suspect that there will be some tornadoes on Sunday,” Moore said. “There’s a slight chance it could grow a little bit of a tail, that it could get down to Dallas and Fort Worth.”

    Hail as large as two inches in diameter could fall from northwestern parts of Oklahoma to North Dakota on Saturday, moving into Kansas, Missouri, and Minnesota on Sunday, the Weather Channel said. The severe weather was slow moving but expected to head further eastward into the later part of next week.

    Related:

    • 'I couldn't stop screaming': Witnesses describe Texas tornadoes
    • Search for Texas tornado survivors: Some victims 'not even near their homes'
    • Texas tornadoes devastate neighborhood built by residents, Habitat for Humanity

    26 comments

    I'll tell you what's going on. These terrible things are happening in states that are anti-gay. It's God's wrath against these states for being anti-gay.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, midwest, tornadoes, plains, weather-channel, thunderstorms
  • Updated
    10
    Apr
    2013
    9:35pm, EDT

    Storm system to bring more snow from South Dakota to Minnesota

    Freezing rains and high winds are expected to push deeper into the South on Thursday. Meanwhile, South Dakota and nearby states are prepping for more snow. The Weather Channel's Chris Warren reports.

    By Erin McClam, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A vast storm system Wednesday night may bring snow from eastern South Dakota into northeast Nebraska, northwest Iowa, and central and southern Minnesota, to include the Twin Cities, The Weather Channel reported. Four to eight inches of snow could fall Wednesday night alone in the Sioux Falls to Minneapolis corridor.

    Light snow could reach as far east as northern Wisconsin, The Weather Channel reported.

    Farther east, in upstate New York, Buffalo could see a brief period of freezing rain Thursday morning.

    Earlier Wednesday, the storm pounded the Dakotas with snow, coated Oklahoma with rare spring ice and took aim at parts of the Mid-Atlantic and South.



    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Snow, freezing rain and strong winds snapped trees, broke power poles and left cars sheathed in ice in South Dakota, and the city of Sioux Falls declared a state of emergency.

    More coverage from weather.com

    Farther south — and much more unusually — ice coated roads in Oklahoma, all the way down to the Red River border with Texas.

    “For April, that is really amazing,” said Tom Niziol, a meteorologist and winter weather expert for The Weather Channel.

    It all made for a messy day of travel in the Great Plains and the Midwest. Chicago O’Hare, a hub airport for the central United States, reported almost 500 flight cancellations.

    Dirk Lammers / AP

    Icy branches partially block a city street and fall amid parked cars in Sioux Falls, S.D.

    As the storm system lumbers eastward, powerful thunderstorms are expected later Wednesday and overnight in Pennsylvania and Maryland, including Philadelphia and its suburbs.

    It has been unusually cold this week in the West and unseasonably warm in the East, including temperatures pushing 90 degrees Wednesday in Washington. That warm air makes the weather system more dangerous.

    “There will be more than enough fuel for these storms,” said Carl Parker, another meteorologist for The Weather Channel.

    A line of late-day storms was expected to sweep across Arkansas on Wednesday afternoon, threatening to dump damaging hail and perhaps spawn tornadoes before pushing out of the state in the evening.

    The same storm system has already produced bizarre weather elsewhere in the country.

    Earlier this week, the temperature fell 55 degrees in Denver in less than 24 hours. Gusty wind nudged 21 cars of a freight train off the tracks in Nebraska. And snowflakes the size of cotton balls fall in Marshall, Minn., NBC affiliate KARE in Minneapolis reported.

    This story was originally published on Wed Apr 10, 2013 6:32 AM EDT

    210 comments

    I hate those damn tornados and hail. Stay safe everyone.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: travel, weather, featured, chicago, snow, new-orleans, denver, ice, cold, cleveland, updated, minneapolis, indianapolis, storms, tornadoes, thunderstorms, sioux-falls
  • 17
    Mar
    2013
    12:24pm, EDT

    Late-winter storms could bring more snow to Northeast

    Terry Prather / AP

    Snow falls early Sunday, March 17, 2013, as an Amish family travels to church services near Maysville, Ky.

     

    By Craig Giammona, NBC News

    A pair of storm systems that were moving across the country on Sunday could join forces to bring snow to the Northeast — even as the official start of spring approaches next week.

    One storm was spreading snow showers from the Cascades and northern Rockies into the northern Plains and was expected to bring snow to the Dakotas, Minnesota and western Wisconsin tonight, the Weather Channel said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    There was also a chance of snow in West Virgina, southwest Pennsylvania and northwestern Virginia Sunday night, according to meteorologists.

    Another storm system was moving over the Ohio Valley Sunday and was expected to continue moving east, joining the northern system to produce a "fairly potent storm off the New England coast Tuesday," the Weather Channel said.

    In addition, severe thunderstorms were in Monday's forecast from southern Ohio down into Kentucky, Tennessee and parts of Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and northeast Texas.

    Snow was expected to close in on parts of the Northeast as the work week gets underway. The Weather Channel said the best chance for accumulating snow and freezing rain was in New England and other interior sections of the Northeast.

    Snow is also possible on the I-95 corridor from Washington to Philadelphia Sunday night and from New York to Boston Monday night.

    The National Oceanic and Atmosphere Administration called for a chance of rain in New York City Monday, with showers also forecast for Tuesday. NOAA also forecasted snow early Tuesday morning in Boston, but little accumulation is expected as the precipitation turns to sleet and rain during the day.

    Wednesday marks the first official day of spring.

    59 comments

    Wow I am glad the Continent of America is made up of the NE and only the NE it sure is good to see that they have such good weather coverage, I would hate to see what happens if a storm of any type hits anywhere than the NE. Oh wait it does every time short of a hurricane weather hits other parts of …

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  • 26
    Dec
    2012
    3:51am, EST

    Christmas Day storms spread snow, tornadoes across US; two dead

    A large part of the country didn't have to dream of a white Christmas. It got one. Mike Seidel of The Weather Channel reports.

    By M. Alex Johnson, NBC News

    A major winter storm pummeled large parts of the U.S. on Tuesday, killing two people as it dropped heavy snow on the Southern Plains and spinning off damaging winds and tornadoes in warmer areas southward. A state of emergency was declared in Mississippi.

    Treacherous holiday travel was expected to become even more of an ordeal by the time the storm arrives in the Northeast later this week.

    Read more from weather.com

    A weather map of the U.S. looked like a child's coloring book, with a variety of advisories, watches and warnings spreading across the middle and the southern half of the country:


    • Blizzard warnings were in force for parts of Indiana, Texas and Oklahoma. Two people were killed Tuesday when high winds toppled trees in Tomball, Texas, near Houston, and in Richland Parish, La., while 21 cars and tractor-trailers crashed in a massive pileup on roads coated with freezing rain in Oklahoma City.
    • Winter storm warnings stretched from those states north and east to Arkansas and Ohio. Almost 150,000 customers were without power late Tuesday across Arkansas, Entergy Arkansas said.
    • At least 31 tornadoes were believed to have been spotted across the South from Texas to Alabama, the National Weather Service reported. Numerous tornado-related injuries were reported in Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas, but, remarkably, none of them were believed to be serious, according to preliminary reports.

    View more videos at: http://nbcdfw.com.

    Hundreds more flights canceled as Christmas storm moves east

    The worst of the tornadoes hit Tuesday afternoon in Mobile, Ala., where about 21,500 customers remained without power Tuesday night, Alabama Power said.

    Witnesses report significant storm damage in Mobile, Alabama. WPMI's John Dzenitis reports.

    "The people of Alabama are strong," state governor Robert Bentley said in a statement released by his office. "We will recover together. First responders are doing a tremendous job helping people in areas impacted by the storms, and those efforts will continue."

    The statement added: "I also want to offer my prayers for everyone impacted by these storms. We will work on the state level to do everything we can to help communities across the state."

    Rick Cauley's family was hosting relatives for Christmas when the tornado sirens went off in Mobile. Not taking any chances, he and his wife, Ashley, hustled everyone down the block to take shelter at the athletic field house at Mobile's Murphy High School in Mobile.

    It turns out, that wasn't the place to head.

    "As luck would have it, that's where the tornado hit," Cauley told The Associated Press. "The pressure dropped and the ears started popping and it got crazy for a second." They were all fine, though the school was damaged, as were a church and several homes, but officials say no one was seriously injured. 

    Mike Kittrell / AP

    Firefighters go door-to-door on North Carlen Street in the Midtown section of Mobile, Ala., after a tornado touched down Tuesday, Dec. 25, 2012.

    Suspected tornadoes also damaged homes and other structures Tuesday in or near Centreville, McNeill, Maxie and Janice in Mississippi; and in or near Luverne, Wilmer and Riderwood in Alabama, according to The Weather Channel.

    A state of emergency was declared in Mississippi late Tuesday by governor Phil Bryant, the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency told NBC News in a statement. Homes, roads and businesses were damaged in at least nine counties.

    Gov. Phil Bryant declared a State of Emergency today for the severe weather system that affected parts of the... fb.me/1LV7QLbJR

    — MSEMA (@MSEMA) December 26, 2012

    Greg Forbes, a meteorologist with The Weather Channel, said thunderstorms with damaging winds and hail would make their way across the Deep South into Wednesday.

    By the time it leaves the New England coast Friday, the storm will have left snow from coast to coast.

    The National Weather Service said blizzard conditions were possible in parts of Illinois, Indiana and Kentucky, which could get 4 to 7 inches of snow. Whiteout conditions were forecast for stretches of Interstate 44 in Missouri, Oklahoma and Texas into the evening.

    Ten to 15 inches of snow was expected in parts of Indiana. In Indianapolis, Mayor Greg Ballard ordered "non-essential" workers to stay home Wednesday.

    Read more from weather.com

    With more than 93.3 million people expected to take to the road during the holiday season, according to AAA, many travelers made last-minute changes of plans and decided to hit the road before the snow hit.

     


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "You definitely have to worry about everyone while you're driving, especially out here," Dallas resident Jerdal Whitaker told NBC 5 of Dallas. "We're not used to the weather that comes, especially when it's ugly, so you definitely have to drive slow."

    Travel delays could persist into Thursday morning along the East Coast because of "low clouds, wind, and potential changeover to light snow," The Weather Channel reported.

    More than 500 U.S. flights had been canceled by 11 p.m. ET, the travel site flightaware.com reported. Many of them were into and out of Dallas, where as much as 3 inches of snow fell Tuesday, NBC 5 of Dallas reported.

    NBCDFW.com: White Christmas brings delays, cancellations to DFW airport

    A low-pressure system intensified as it moved across the Southern Plains toward the Lower Mississippi Valley on Tuesday. That sucked in arctic air from the north and the west to mix with warmer, wetter air in the southern half of the country, the National Weather Service said. 

    The system is forecast to track east-northeast, getting stronger by the hour, as it moves into the Mid-Atlantic. From there, snow and freezing rain are expected to spread quickly northeast, reaching New England by Thursday morning. As much as a foot of snow was forecast later in the week across western and upstate New York.

    Ioanna Dafermou and Meredith Placko of NBC News, Jim Cantore, Greg Forbes and Scott Kurtz of The Weather Channel and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    • Christmas storms spread snow, tornadoes across US, snarling travel
    • 4 firefighters shot, 2 killed, in apparent trap
    • Video: Police officer jumps in frigid water to save woman
    • Residents consider future as demolitions begin in Breezy Point
    • Emotions run high as Newtown splits over gun control

    Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    77 comments

    The NRA must be thankful that the weather is making front page today. America seems to be taking a nice break from the recent spate of shootings.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: us-news, weather, featured, christmas, holidays, snow, storm, tornadoes, nbcdfw, thunderstorms
  • 24
    Dec
    2012
    9:36pm, EST

    Major winter storm poses threat for holiday travel

    Traveling could be tricky in certain parts of the U.S., where blizzards and severe storms are expected to last through the evening on Christmas day. The Weather Channel's Paul Goodloe reports.

    By Isolde Raftery and Ian Johnston, NBC News

    A major winter storm sweeping through the United States could tangle holiday travel plans in the central United States and even in the South, as could a weaker storm moving through the Northeast.  

    The Northeast storm will likely bring a "wintry mix" to cities of the I-95 corridor and east to the coast but could still be detrimental to holiday travelers, according to weather.com. 

    “Despite the ‘more wet than white’ forecast for the I-95 urban corridor, expect major delays at the major Northeast airport hubs Wednesday due to low cloud ceilings and strong winds,” weather.com warned. “These delays may persist into Thursday morning due to low clouds, wind and potential changeover to light snow.”


    Read more from weather.com

    The Weather Channel added: “Unfortunately, this occurs not only during the Christmas holiday, but also in the peak travel period after Christmas Day in the South, Midwest, and East.”

    According to the flightstats.com website, 146 flights had been canceled and 4,089 had been delayed across the U.S. as of 10:50 p.m. ET on Monday. It was not known how many of these problems were due to the weather. 

    Car travelers will also likely be impacted -- AAA estimates that 93.3 million Americans will travel more than 50 miles for the holidays. 

    Last week, snow and high winds disrupted thousands of flights from the Midwest through the Northeast.

    The stronger storm started in the Western U.S. and dumped six feet of snow in California's Sierra mountains.  

    Snow is forecast to cover the roads in Salt Lake City on Christmas morning, weather.com reported. Fresh snow is also expected to blanket parts of the adjacent High Plains, including Denver.  

    As the storm, dubbed "Euclid" by The Weather Channel, moves southeast, it threatens to hinder travel in the South, where it is forecast to bring “severe thunderstorms capable of damaging winds and tornadoes,” according to weather.com. Rain and thunderstorms are also predicted to hit Jacksonville, Charlotte and Orlando on Christmas Day.

    Hundreds of flights hit again as winter weather continues

    The storm is will rev up over Texas and sweep east into Mississippi. Thunderstorms are expected to develop during the morning hours of Christmas Day, around 3 a.m., lasting until about noon, according to The National Weather Service.

    It is forecast to move through the South with 70- to 80-mile-per-hour winds early Wednesday morning, which prompted Mississippi officials encouraged residents to bring in their outdoor Christmas decorations for fear they could become dangerous projectiles.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    “We understand that most people will be focusing on the holiday,” Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant said in a statement. “Please plan now for how you will receive a severe weather warning and know where you will go when it is issued.”

    “There are enough conditions working together to increase the threat for severe weather on Christmas Day,” the Weather Service said, adding that the main threat exists from the Houston area northward to College Station. “Residents of Southeast Texas are encouraged to monitor forecasts for updates.”

    Three to six inches of snow are predicted in northern and western Arkansas later on Christmas Day, according to the Weather Service. One to three inches are forecast elsewhere in the state, although no accumulation is expected near the border with Louisiana.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    • Holiday wreck: 4 killed in wrong-way minivan collision
    • Boy's Christmas wish: Adoption of little brother caught in US-Russia spat
    • SEAL Team 4 commanding officer dies in Afghanistan
    • Report: Female Las Vegas blackjack dealer stabs another
    • NRA chief: If putting armed police in schools is crazy, 'then call me crazy'
    • Ban high-capacity ammo clips? Activists zero in on idea
    • Video: Teacher brings opera to elementary students

    Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    90 comments

    Looks like Republicans are out to destroy the world again...Why dont we ban bad weather?

    Show more
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  • 10
    Nov
    2012
    8:49am, EST

    Up to 4 feet of snow in Montana as storm hits West

    Matt Volz / AP

    A man walks his dog past a half-buried statue of a newspaper boy in Helena, Montana, Friday.

    By NBC News staff

    A winter storm dumped up to 4 feet of snow on parts of Montana and was expected to create severe thunderstorms as it heads east, Weather.com reported early Saturday.

    A strong jet stream was bringing moisture from the Pacific into the western U.S., while cold air pushed in from Canada, Nick Wiltgen of Weather.com said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    He also said there was windy weather across much of the West. “Winds over higher terrain have been especially impressive, with a top gust of 111 mph at Meteor Crater in northern Arizona,” Wiltgen said, adding, “thank goodness it wasn't snowing there.”

    He expected light snow would continue Saturday for much of Montana, though the winds had diminished in the western half of the state.

    Read more on Weather.com

    Wiltgen added that there had even been some lake-effect snow in western Nevada, south and southeast of Lake Tahoe and Pyramid Lake.

    “Beware of this in the Reno and Carson City areas,” he said.

    “Utah and western Colorado are in line for the more widespread snows, with winter storm warnings in effect for most mountain ranges in those areas,” he added, predicting a “bonanza” for ski resorts across the region.

    “Saturday brings a transition from a wintry mix to snow for more of the western Dakotas. Snow showers, locally heavy, will continue across Wyoming and into Utah and western Colorado as well,” he said. “Some locations in western North Dakota, including Minot and Williston, could see well over a foot of snow from this storm system by sunset Saturday.”

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    • CIA Director David Petraeus resigns, cites extramarital affair
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    • During blackout, man uses Toyota Prius to light house
    • Investigator matches blood on Sgt. Bales clothes to DNA from Afghan massacre scene
    • Video: Security tape shows man crashing stolen jet
    • Hispanics to Obama: We helped you, now you help us

    Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    76 comments

    Wow, just waiting for the Righties to come here and say "this has nothing to do with climate change". Sure.. four feet of snow with 111 mph winds isn't a superstorm, and Sandy was just some drizzle. Time to wake up folks.

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  • 13
    Oct
    2012
    8:02am, EDT

    Severe thunderstorms, tornadoes threaten central states

    The Weather Channel's Maria LaRosa takes a look at the nation's weekend forecast.

    By NBC News staff

    Severe thunderstorms with damaging winds, large hail and isolated tornadoes are threatening a swath of the central United States from Iowa to parts of Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas, forecasters warned.


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    Chris Dolce and Jon Erdman, of weather.com, said the Midwest would be likely hit by storms and showers Saturday morning, but the “greatest concern for severe storms will be from the afternoon through evening.”


    “While the primary severe threats look to be damaging straight-line winds and large hail, the degree of low-level wind shear and instability may spawn isolated tornadoes in these areas,” they added.

    Weather.com said the storm system would continue moving eastward on Sunday.

    “Scattered severe storms may flare again along the cold front with spotty damaging wind gusts and possibly a tornado from the southern Great Lakes southwestward to the Ohio Valley, lower-Mississippi Valley and southeastern Texas,” Dolce and Erdman added.

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    86 comments

    I want to say it before someone else does, it's Obama's fault. Unless of course Romney gets elected, then it's his fault.

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  • 20
    Jul
    2012
    6:12pm, EDT

    Shopping mall roof collapses during heavy rain

    By Louis Casiano, NBC News

    Heavy rain and thunderstorms caused part of the roof of a North Carolina mall to collapse Friday, NBC station WCNC in Charlotte reported.  


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    The station reported that the SouthPark Mall was evacuated and emergency crews were on the scene. The Charlotte Observer said no injuries were reported.

    An aerial view showed two holes in the roof and some vehicles flooded in the mall parking lot, according to the station.

    A flash flood warning was issued for the southern Mecklenburg county. Thunderstorms with widespread showers were expected Friday evening.


    The National Weather Service said rainfall produced two inches per hour in the Charlotte area Friday. 

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    62 comments

    Are you kidding me about Union crews!! What is the difference between the bad State workers and and Union crews.................nothing, both take 15 guys to do the job of a 5 man crew at three times the price and three times the excuses when someone has a problem.

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    Explore related topics: weather, charlotte, mall, national-weather-service, thunderstorms
  • 3
    Jul
    2012
    9:03am, EDT

    Triple-digit temps pop up again as power slow to be restored

    After suffering through oppressive heat and power outages neighborhoods attempted to slowly clear the debris – but it may be the weekend before everyone has power again. NBC's Tom Costello reports.

    By msnbc.com staff and NBC News

    With power, and air conditioning, still out in nearly 1.3 million homes and businesses -- and many of those not likely to be reconnected for days -- triple-digit temps returned to some central U.S. cities on Tuesday. Even more areas were forecast to reach or top 100 over the next few days as the heat once again expands eastward.

    Parts of Montana and Wyoming topped 100, while St. Louis saw 100 degrees by 4 p.m. on Tuesday -- and with the humidity it felt like 104.


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    Kansas City, Mo., reached 99 degrees but it felt like 103. Minneapolis, Minn., only got to 95 but it, too, felt like 103. 

    Dozens of other cities, many of them hit with power outages during the fierce storms last weekend, were still sweltering with yet another day in the 90s.


    The National Weather Service early Tuesday issued excessive heat warnings for parts of Minnesota, Wisconsin, Indiana, Ohio, Illinois, Missouri and Kentucky. 

    That heat will expand "eastward over the next few days," it added. "Much of the eastern third of the country will see a resurgence of the heat experienced last weekend."

    Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

    A sign bears the bad news for members of Sleepy Hollow Bath and Racquet Club in Falls Church, Va., on Tuesday. The pool has been closed since last Friday night when a violent storm caused massive power outages in the Washington area.

    The July 4th forecasts include: St. Louis at 104; Kansas City at 102; Little Rock, Ark, at 101; and Memphis, Tenn., and Minneapolis at 100 degrees.

    On Monday, the power outages were reduced by about a million customers. But residents and businesses were still struggling with outages in Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, Washington, D.C., and West Virginia. 

    In Washington, D.C., where blackouts are a frequent problem in the summer months, Mayor Vincent Gray urged President Barack Obama to declare a state of emergency.

    "I think people are fed up with power outages, and we need a game-changer," Gray said. "We need an approach now that's going to stop this in the first place." 

    In Chicago on Monday, more than 250,000 Chicago-area customers were knocked offline by Sunday's storms; that number was reduced to 48,000 by Tuesday morning, NBCChicago.com reported.

    In Ohio, some 300,000 customers remained without power.

    Slideshow: Storms, extreme heat hit millions

    /

    As nearly 1.5 million people across the country woke up Tuesday to another day with no power, the National Weather Service warned dangerously high temperatures would be persisting through the end of the week in some states.

    Launch slideshow

    Much of the devastation to the power grid was blamed on last weekend's rare "super derecho," a storm packing hurricane-force winds across a 700-mile stretch from the Midwest to the Atlantic Ocean.

    The derecho moved quickly with little warning. The straight-line winds were just as destructive as any hurricane — but when a tropical system strikes, officials usually have several days to get extra personnel in place.

    So utility companies had to wait days for extra crews traveling from as far away as Quebec and Oklahoma. And workers found that the toppled trees and power lines often entangled broken equipment in debris that had to be removed before workers could even get started. 

    The largest U.S. home and auto insurer, State Farm, said it had received about 29,000 claims from last weekend's storms, more than three-quarters of them for house damage. 

    USAA and Nationwide said they had received more than 12,000 claims in total from the weekend storms. Most were for home damage. 

    Officials feared the death toll, already at 23, could climb because of the heat and widespread use of generators, which emit fumes that can be dangerous in enclosed spaces.

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    The Weather Channel’s website, weather.com, said the worst heat on July 4 would be located over the central states, with parts of the Midwest seeing highs about 5 to 15 degrees above average.

    “The sultry conditions will also extend eastward into the Mid-Atlantic, including Washington, D.C., and Philadelphia,” wrote weather.com meteorologist Chris Dolce.

    Dolce warned that a cold front would bring scattered storms to the Northeast on July 4, saying “a few of these storms could be severe with damaging winds and hail.”

    “Parts of the Southeast may deal with pop-up afternoon and evening thunderstorms, particularly in the southern Appalachians and south Florida,” he added.

    Cooling centers for residents who don't have air conditioning have opened up across the country. In Virginia, in response to the number of cooling shelters in the area that don't allow animals, a gourmet pet bakery opened up a cooling center just for pets, wamu.org reported. 

    In Wheaton, Ill., a suburb of Chicago, July 4 fireworks and a parade were canceled due to damage from Sunday's thunderstorms.

    "I don't think there's a block of houses that doesn't have half a dozen trees down, or parts of trees. It's a real mess to get around," resident Donald Sender told NBCChicago.com as he refueled his generator.

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    272 comments

    Enjoy it you republican right-wingers, climate change deniers, flat earth believers, thanks to you and your support for greedy corporations to pollute with impunity, this is what you and your descendants (will even be much worse then) will enjoy for the rest of your remaining summers. And of course, …

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    Explore related topics: weather, washington, chicago, heat, thunderstorms, july-4
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