The National Weather Service is warning of a prolonged period of extremely cold temperatures for Western Pennsylvania.
Experts tell Channel 11 that the Pittsburgh region will see more ice on the waterways than last year, and will likely see ice accumulation that rivals 2018.
PITTSBURGH (KDKA) — An extreme cold watch has been issued for the entire Pittsburgh area next week, starting Sunday night and lasting through Thursday morning. The region could see some of the coldest air in almost a decade.
Cities and organizations throughout the Pittsburgh area are going to be opening warming centers as the region is bracing for the arrival of extremely cold temperatures over the next several days. The National Weather Service has issued a cold weather advisory that is in place through 1 p.
The National Weather Service issued an updated report at 5:58 p.m. on Tuesday for snow showers until 7 p.m. for Butler, Beaver, Allegheny and Washington counties.
More than 300 schools and community centers closed down Tuesday as the region battled subzero wind chills and blustery conditions. But we haven’t even felt the worst of it yet, authorities said. “The coldest night will be tonight,
A winter weather advisory has been issued for central Ohio counties, according to the National Weather Service. The storm will affect our area, too.
The National Weather Service's Pittsburgh office issued a hazardous weather outlook for the region, warning more than 3 inches of snow is possible.
The National Weather Service Pittsburgh released this forecast Thursday morning: The area is under a winter weather advisory until 4 a.m. Friday. Widespread accumulating snow is predicted to start Thursday morning and will continue all day,
National Weather Service says a potentially dangerous Cold Wave is expected in the Wayne, Holmes area on MLK Day. It will be a chilly Martin Luther King Jr. Day with an anticipated high of just 2 degrees in Wayne County. The low in the evening is -6.
according to a hazardous weather outlook issued by the National Weather Service's Pittsburgh office on Thursday afternoon. "There is a 20% to 50% chance of 3 inches or more of snow accumulation ...
Timothy Jones knows cold. But bundled in a heavy coat and snug-fit, black wool cap, the Shaler man appeared unfazed Tuesday morning as he quietly paced in one of the region’s coldest spots: a narrow walkway,