Pittsburgh faces snow showers and gusty winds up to 65 mph as a cold front arrives, with potential squalls in western PA.
High winds could possibly cause widespread power outages and create challenging travel conditions in the region.
Rain is arriving also with the higher temperatures and the precipitation will bring a risk for flooding in the Pittsburgh area. According to the National Weather Service, a low pressure system will move into the region by Friday and will bring between three-quarters of an inch to 1.
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.
The National Weather Service's Pittsburgh office has issued a hazardous weather outlook for much of the region.
The National Weather Service issued an updated wind advisory at 8:47 a.m. on Monday valid for Tuesday between midnight and 3 p.m. for Westmoreland Ridges, Fayette Ridges and Higher Elevations of Indiana.
Steve Fazekas’ citizen weather observer station in Winfield recorded a temperature of 15 degrees below zero just after 5 a.m. Wednesday. Fazekas’ reading came in just below the Pittsburgh region’s lowest temperature on record for Wednesday’s date — minus-4 degrees Jan.
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 Marion County. The low in the evening is -6.
National Weather Service says a potentially dangerous Cold Wave is expected in Greater Akron starting on MLK Day. It will be a chilly Martin Luther King Jr. Day with an anticipated high of just 6 degrees. And things get more extreme and potentially dangerous from there.
The bitter cold last week caused rivers to freeze across the Pittsburgh area, and experts worry that could create problems as the temperatures increase again.
No matter how tempting, people should not walk or play on the area’s frozen-over rivers. Especially because things will be warming up soon. Meteorologists at the National Weather Service expect temperatures to be above freezing Thursday through Sunday,
Over 50 years ago, in a historically Black neighborhood in Pittsburgh, a little-known group of trailblazers changed emergency medicine forever.