Severe, Kansas City and National Weather Service
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The area at an enhanced risk of severe weather has expanded to include the Kansas City metro area and portions of southern Oklahoma, the National Weather Service’s Storm Prediction Center announced o...
From The Kansas City Star
Clouds will increase Wednesday night as temperatures drop into the mid-40s.
From Yahoo
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On Your Side Meteorologist Jim Castillo will be monitoring the text line and answering your questions. Text us at 314-444-5355.
An active night for severe weather in portions of Kansas prompted multiple tornado warnings with a storm impacting several central Kansas counties. Late Tuesday night included reports of a possible tornado touching down near Kanopolis Lake,
We are tracking a series of storm systems from the southwest USA followed by a main bigger storm. This means an unsettled weather pattern will continue into the weekend.
The National Weather Service has issued a severe thunderstorm watch, in effect until 3 a.m. Wednesday, for portions of northeast Kansas and northwest Missouri. In Kansas, the watch includes Atchison and Doniphan counties. In Missouri, the affected counties are Atchison, Holt, and Nodaway.
Rain and snow winding down this morning, but there are more chances for storms later in the week! Meteorologist Jack Maney has your Storm Track 3 forecast.
Widespread thunderstorms early Wednesday morning may bring damaging wind gusts, hail, and brief tornadoes during the morning commute.
A massive storm hitting the central U.S. on Wednesday could spin up damaging tornadoes and dump heavy rain from northern Texas to the Great Lakes.
WICHITA, Kan. (KWCH) - A Storm Team 12 Weather Alert Day is in place for Tuesday and into the night with the risk of severe storms concentrating over north central, central, and eastern Kansas. Southwest Kansas will have high winds and fire danger.
A highway of moisture flowing off unusually warm waters — combined with an intense storm system — will result in dangerous flooding from Arkansas through the Ohio and the Tennessee valleys over the next few days.