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CNN
CNN
7 Aug 2023
Aditi Sangal,Elise Hammond,Maureen Chowdhury


NextImg:Millions in Eastern US are under risk of severe weather | CNN
  • More than 120 million people in the Eastern US are at risk of severe thunderstorms Monday with damaging wind gusts, large hail, heavy rain and a few tornadoes possible from Philadelphia to Atlanta.
  • The worst of it will be from the Appalachians into Maryland, southern Pennsylvania and New Jersey, including Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington, DC, primarily due to damaging winds.
  • The DC federal government closed at 3 p.m. ET in anticipation of the storms.
4 Posts

DC federal government closes early due to storms

The Washington, DC, federal government is closing early in anticipation of severe weather expected in the region Monday afternoon.

Federal offices closed at 3 p.m. ET and employees were instructed to leave early, according to a notice.

The main threat in addition to thunderstorms in DC is the potential for damaging winds, forecasts say.

More than 4,000 flights canceled or delayed Monday as storms threat looms

More than 1,000 flights are canceled Monday – and an additional 3,000 delayed – as severe weather hits the Eastern US. 

The numbers from FlightAware show the most-impacted airport is the world’s busiest, Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson. More than 250 inbound and outbound flights have been canceled and there have been around 400 delayed flights in Atlanta.  

There are also significant issues at Baltimore’s airport, where one in five flights is canceled, and New York’s LaGuardia and Kennedy airports where there are ongoing disruptions.

Delta Air Lines, headquartered at Atlanta, has the most cancelations among US airlines, according to the FlightAware figures. Delta canceled 276 flights (8% of its schedule) and delayed 471 (13% of its schedule).

Nearly 600 Southwest flights have been delayed, according to FlightAware, and more than 180 have been cancelled.  

The Federal Aviation Administration reported it was slowing flights headed towards New York, Philadelphia, and Washington, DC area airports because of thunderstorms. It warned of impacts this afternoon to flights from Florida north to New York due to the storms. The FAA said it has limited ability to direct New York flights north through Canadian airspace because of “staffing issues” in Canada.  

Meanwhile, areas from Arizona and Florida get no relief from sweltering heat

While parts of the East brace for hail and heavy rain on Monday, cities from Arizona to Florida will continue to deal with dangerous heat this week.

“Numerous record high temperatures and record high morning minimum temperatures are likely over the next few days with no end in sight going into the later part of this week,” the National Weather Service said.

Excessive heat warnings and heat advisories in effect across the southern part of the country, from southeast California into Florida, will likely remain in effect “for the foreseeable future as there is no relief in sight to the heat for the remainder of the week across these areas,” the weather service said.

The heat continues to set new records: About 65 records were set or tied Saturday and Sunday so far across cities in Arizona, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico and Texas. At least 120 more could be set from Sunday through Tuesday.

Austin, Texas, hit 105 degrees Sunday, marking the 30th consecutive day with a high temperature above 100 degrees.

Albuquerque reached a high of 102 Saturday – breaking the prior record of 98 degrees set in 1995. This is also the hottest August day ever in the city.

In New Orleans – where city officials warned that high humidity levels will result in temperatures that “feel like” 115 degrees or higher – cooling centers were open for residents in need of respite from the heat, officials said.

“The forecasted excessive heat warning for Monday, Aug. 7 will mark the 17th excessive heat warning issued for 2023 so far, beating the previous record of five warnings in 2021,” New Orleans officials said in a news release.

CNN Meteorologist Gene Norman and CNN’s Raja Razek contributed to this report.

More than 120 million people at risk as severe storms could bring large hail and tornadoes in the Eastern US

More than 120 million people in the Eastern US are at risk of severe thunderstorms Monday with damaging wind gusts, large hail, heavy rain and a few tornadoes possible from Philadelphia to Atlanta.

A potent storm system is moving east after battering the Ohio River Valley Sunday and increasing the risk for severe weather Monday across a large area of the country to the east of the Mississippi River.

The worst of it will be from the Appalachians into Maryland, southern Pennsylvania and New Jersey, including Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington DC, primarily due to damaging winds. Areas from northeastern Tennessee to parts of Maryland and southern Pennsylvania are under a moderate risk, Level 4 out of 5, for severe storms.

An area from northern Alabama into southern New York, including Atlanta, Charlotte, North Carolina, and Binghamton, New York, is under an enhanced risk, Level 3 out of 5, for severe storms. A slight risk for severe storms, a Level 2 of 5, spreads from western Alabama to southern New York, including New York City, Pittsburgh, Charleston, South Carolina, Virginia Beach, Virginia and Wilmington, North Carolina.

Parts of the Northeast could also see heavy rainfall in association with these storms. A slight risk for excessive rainfall, or a Level 2 of 4, has been issued for the Northeast. Scattered rainfall of 2 to 4 inches is possible Monday.

“In the areas of thunderstorms, severe weather and flash flooding will be a threat,” the National Weather Service said.

There were more than 150 storm reports across the East on Sunday and over 130 Saturday, including eight tornadoes, spread across Colorado, Illinois, Iowa and Nebraska.

There were another 92 reports of damaging wind and 37 reports of large hail, mainly across the central Plains and mid-Mississippi River Valley.

The Washington, DC, federal government is closing early in anticipation of severe weather expected in the region Monday afternoon.

Federal offices closed at 3 p.m. ET and employees were instructed to leave early, according to a notice.

The main threat in addition to thunderstorms in DC is the potential for damaging winds, forecasts say.

More than 1,000 flights are canceled Monday – and an additional 3,000 delayed – as severe weather hits the Eastern US. 

The numbers from FlightAware show the most-impacted airport is the world’s busiest, Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson. More than 250 inbound and outbound flights have been canceled and there have been around 400 delayed flights in Atlanta.  

There are also significant issues at Baltimore’s airport, where one in five flights is canceled, and New York’s LaGuardia and Kennedy airports where there are ongoing disruptions.

Delta Air Lines, headquartered at Atlanta, has the most cancelations among US airlines, according to the FlightAware figures. Delta canceled 276 flights (8% of its schedule) and delayed 471 (13% of its schedule).

Nearly 600 Southwest flights have been delayed, according to FlightAware, and more than 180 have been cancelled.  

The Federal Aviation Administration reported it was slowing flights headed towards New York, Philadelphia, and Washington, DC area airports because of thunderstorms. It warned of impacts this afternoon to flights from Florida north to New York due to the storms. The FAA said it has limited ability to direct New York flights north through Canadian airspace because of “staffing issues” in Canada.  

While parts of the East brace for hail and heavy rain on Monday, cities from Arizona to Florida will continue to deal with dangerous heat this week.

“Numerous record high temperatures and record high morning minimum temperatures are likely over the next few days with no end in sight going into the later part of this week,” the National Weather Service said.

Excessive heat warnings and heat advisories in effect across the southern part of the country, from southeast California into Florida, will likely remain in effect “for the foreseeable future as there is no relief in sight to the heat for the remainder of the week across these areas,” the weather service said.

The heat continues to set new records: About 65 records were set or tied Saturday and Sunday so far across cities in Arizona, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico and Texas. At least 120 more could be set from Sunday through Tuesday.

Austin, Texas, hit 105 degrees Sunday, marking the 30th consecutive day with a high temperature above 100 degrees.

Albuquerque reached a high of 102 Saturday – breaking the prior record of 98 degrees set in 1995. This is also the hottest August day ever in the city.

In New Orleans – where city officials warned that high humidity levels will result in temperatures that “feel like” 115 degrees or higher – cooling centers were open for residents in need of respite from the heat, officials said.

“The forecasted excessive heat warning for Monday, Aug. 7 will mark the 17th excessive heat warning issued for 2023 so far, beating the previous record of five warnings in 2021,” New Orleans officials said in a news release.

CNN Meteorologist Gene Norman and CNN’s Raja Razek contributed to this report.

More than 120 million people in the Eastern US are at risk of severe thunderstorms Monday with damaging wind gusts, large hail, heavy rain and a few tornadoes possible from Philadelphia to Atlanta.

A potent storm system is moving east after battering the Ohio River Valley Sunday and increasing the risk for severe weather Monday across a large area of the country to the east of the Mississippi River.

The worst of it will be from the Appalachians into Maryland, southern Pennsylvania and New Jersey, including Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington DC, primarily due to damaging winds. Areas from northeastern Tennessee to parts of Maryland and southern Pennsylvania are under a moderate risk, Level 4 out of 5, for severe storms.

An area from northern Alabama into southern New York, including Atlanta, Charlotte, North Carolina, and Binghamton, New York, is under an enhanced risk, Level 3 out of 5, for severe storms. A slight risk for severe storms, a Level 2 of 5, spreads from western Alabama to southern New York, including New York City, Pittsburgh, Charleston, South Carolina, Virginia Beach, Virginia and Wilmington, North Carolina.

Parts of the Northeast could also see heavy rainfall in association with these storms. A slight risk for excessive rainfall, or a Level 2 of 4, has been issued for the Northeast. Scattered rainfall of 2 to 4 inches is possible Monday.

“In the areas of thunderstorms, severe weather and flash flooding will be a threat,” the National Weather Service said.

There were more than 150 storm reports across the East on Sunday and over 130 Saturday, including eight tornadoes, spread across Colorado, Illinois, Iowa and Nebraska.

There were another 92 reports of damaging wind and 37 reports of large hail, mainly across the central Plains and mid-Mississippi River Valley.