The National Weather Service (NWS) has issued a "Lake Effect Snow Warning" for Oswego County in northern New York, along the banks of Lake Ontario. Up to 10 inches of heavy snow has been forecast, making travel difficult for many.
The National Weather Service issued an updated cold weather advisory at 1:44 p.m. on Tuesday in effect until Wednesday at noon for Oneida, Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Tompkins, Madison and Cortland counties.
Advisories from the NWS were in place for New York, Montana, California, Wyoming, Colorado and Alaska early on Friday.
As of Thursday morning, AccuWeather gives Tuesday a 55% chance of a snow shower and Wednesday a 30% chance of a snow shower. The National Weather Service does not foresee any snowfall for New York City in the coming days, as of the time of publication.
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.
The NWS has issued a winter storm watch for several counties in New York, with heavy lake effect snow expected.
The NYC area could see significant snow this weekend for the first time in years, with "the potential for up to 6 inches." Here's the forecast.
The NWS has issued winter weather advisories for parts of upstate New York, with lake effect snow expected to impact travel. Here's how much snow to expect.
Southern Erie and southwestern Genesee counties are expected to receive 1 to 2 inches of snow Monday morning, with 3 to 5 inches possible in areas under the most persistent snow bands. A lake effect snow warning is in effect for Wyoming,
New York’s being hit by an arctic polar vortex, making temperatures drop hard overnight after a snow storm hit on Sunday.
New York City emergency officials have issued a “Cold Weather Alert” amid a stretch of below-freezing wind chills that will only get colder into next week. The coldest air of the season so far will crash into the tri-state on starting early next week with “feels like” temperatures Tuesday dropping as low as -7 degrees.
Binghamton saw 70 degrees in November, a warmer-than-usual New Year's, then a deep freeze. Here's why it's happening.