Severe storms pummel parts of us
CHICAGO—Successive punches of snow and wind were set to impact the eastern half of the United States on Monday as severe weather swept across much of the nation and made roads impassable in the Upper Midwest.
Forecasters said mid-Atlantic states and Washington, DC, were at greatest risk for high winds and tornadoes. The cold front was expected to move off the East Coast by Tuesday, bringing sharply colder weather in its wake, forecasters said.
The late winter blast comes as Hawaii continued to be affected by a separate storm system that caused severe flooding over the weekend.
Impact on airports
The National Weather Service warned that a line of severe storms with damaging winds would cross much of the Eastern United States. After firing up on Sunday, the storms were crossing the Mississippi, Tennessee and Ohio valleys.
The storm threat was expected to enter the Appalachians, then move toward the East Coast, where “severe thunderstorms with widespread damaging winds and several tornadoes” were expected, the service said.
A stretch from parts of South Carolina to Maryland appeared most likely to experience the greatest damaging winds on Monday afternoon, the weather service said. That could include Raleigh, North Carolina, Richmond, Virginia and the nation’s capital.
Officials said schools in Raleigh and Chapel Hill, North Carolina, would be closed on Monday. Gov. Josh Stein urged residents to enable emergency alerts on their phones ahead of expected wind gusts of 119 kilometers per hour.

