Winter Storm Will Plunge Much of U.S. Into Intense Cold
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We may have a week of weather stretching out ahead of us with no big storms, but that won’t mean it will be uneventful. We’re still stuck in our bitterly cold pattern, and it will stay that way for the next several days.
A cold weather advisory was released by the National Weather Service on Tuesday at 1:16 a.m. valid from 7 p.m. until Wednesday 10 a.m. for Clearfield, Cambria and Somerset counties.
The National Weather Service released an updated cold weather advisory at 1:27 a.m. on Tuesday in effect until 1 p.m. for Steuben County.
At least 22 deaths were attributed to the weekend’s snowstorm. More than 700,000 homes and businesses, particularly in the South, remained without power on Monday, and officials said it could take days to restore it.
On Tuesday at 1:04 a.m. the National Weather Service issued a cold weather advisory valid for Wednesday between midnight and 10 a.m. for Hudson, Essex and Union counties.
There is a Cold Weather Advisory in place tonight with wind chills in the -5° to -20° range for Tioga County in Pennsylvania and Steuben County in New York in the Twin Tiers until 1PM Tuesday. You should make sure to limit your time outside until Tuesday afternoon.
Knoxville will remain at the cusp of freezing or below at least through Saturday, Jan. 31, according to the National Weather Service. The highest temperature Knoxville will see all week is 35 degrees. Lows are very cold — in the single digits and low teens.
On Monday at 1:33 p.m. an updated cold weather advisory was issued by the National Weather Service valid from 7 p.m. until Wednesday 10 a.m. for Monmouth, Salem, Gloucester, Camden, Burlington, Ocean,
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Cold weather shelters opening across Central Florida: Here's the list
Several cold weather shelters are available throughout Central Florida this week for residents living without heat.
A massive winter storm continued Sunday morning, dumping snow, sleet and freezing rain across the South and up through New England, bringing frigid temperatures, widespread power outages and treacherous road conditions.