Knoxville and East Tennessee get new storm forecast
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Latest timing, ice totals expected this weekend
South Carolina is bracing for a high-impact winter storm/ice event this weekend, with ice and sleet the main threats.
The National Weather Service is warning of a major ice storm this weekend that could leave homes and businesses without power for days amid bitter cold.
Follow along with this blog, where we will be sharing news, videos, photos, and social media posts about the winter storm.
A significant winter storm approaches the Western Carolinas this weekend, bringing potential widespread impacts to travel, power grids, and daily life across the region.
Right now, the National Weather Service forecast for Greenville says snow is likely Saturday before 4 p.m., then snow and sleet after that with a high near 36. After 10 p.m. Saturday 80% chance snow and freezing rain, continuing on Sunday. Mostly cloudy on Sunday night with a low around 16. BRRR. And not good for any precipitation on power lines.
The National Weather Service is predicting a winter storm bring cold weather along with the possibility of snow in Upstate SC. Here's the latest
Mayor Errick D. Simmons is advising residents that the timing of this weekend’s winter weather event has been adjusted, with freezing rain and sleet now expected to begin as early as Friday evening and continue through Sunday.
Greenville is increasingly likely to get snow or sleet this weekend as an Arctic cold front approaches, meteorologists say, but which one remains uncertain.
Greenville city officials are preparing for extreme winter weather continuing through Sunday. Forecasts indicate significant ice accumulation, which may pose serious risks to travel, power lines and tree limbs.
Some schools will monitor road and weather conditions after storm hits while others have announced e-learning days to start the week
Beaufort County and much of coastal South Carolina and Georgia will likely be spared from wintry weather as winter storm Fern continues toward the eastern United States, according to a Friday morning briefing from the National Weather Service’s Charleston office.