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  • Region is betting big on offshore wind. Can it deliver?

    Region is betting big on offshore wind. Can it deliver?

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    PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Dozens of hard hats and yellow safety vests were neatly placed on folding chairs. A giant American flag hung from the rafters of a hangar-sized fabrication building. And cellophane-wrapped cookies with blue icing spelling out “Revolution Wind, powered by Ørsted and Eversource,” added the final celebratory touch.

    After a rough year for the fledgling U.S. offshore wind industry, the crowd of union leaders, energy company representatives, state and federal officials, media, and other guests at the Port of Providence on June 13 were marking the final assembly of the advanced foundation components for the Revolution Wind project, a 700-megawatt offshore wind farm currently under construction 12 miles southwest of Martha’s Vineyard that will deliver energy to Rhode Island and Connecticut.

    Rhode Island Gov. Dan McKee called the now-bustling port – packed with offshore wind turbine components and hosting a gleaming new crew service vessel built for Ørsted, the Danish offshore wind giant, docked nearby – “an example of what can happen all around the country.” The construction progress “marks a pivotal moment, not just for Rhode Island but our country’s offshore wind industry,” McKee added.

    Other governors across New England are banking big on the mammoth turbines being installed off the coast to not only keep the lights on as the region moves toward cleaner electricity, but also to meet a surge in power demand from electric vehicles and a shift to electrified home heating.

    The region’s push into offshore wind comes amid longstanding apprehension by federal regulators and the nation’s electric reliability watchdog over New England’s dependence on natural gas power generation, worrisome when paired with its constrained pipeline capacity during extreme cold.

    Whether the hundreds of turbines planned to spring up off the coast – and the major grid upgrades needed to get that power to where it’s needed – can reliably meet those expectations will come down in large part to timing, experts say.

    That includes not just how fast developers, who are facing supply chain problems and sometimes stiff local resistance and have complained about permitting delays, can get turbines built, but also when the expected demand increase from an electrified future materializes.

    Also in the mix: how quickly the system is able to inject the power produced offshore and whether it can handle the dips in output that can come with variable generation, said John Moura, director of reliability assessment at the North American Electric Reliability Corporation, which sets and enforces standards for the American power system.

    “They can build and design this, it’s really about time, money, and the will to do that,” Moura said. “The timing piece is the part we’re most concerned with.”

    ‘Moving in the same direction’

    The New England Independent System Operator runs the electric grid for Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut, ensuring that there’s enough electric supply to match demand in real time. What helps make that somewhat easier than in regions overseen by other multi-state regional transmission organizations is broad alignment among its member states on energy policy.

    All six have clean power goals. Rhode Island is pushing for 100 percent renewable power by 2030. Connecticut is requiring 100 percent zero carbon power by 2040.

    Massachusetts wants to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050. In June, Vermont’s legislature overrode a gubernatorial veto to enact a 100 percent renewable energy by 2035 standard.

    Maine is aiming to get to 80 percent percent renewable power by 2030 and 100 percent by 2050.

    New Hampshire is something of an outlier, but even it has a renewable energy portfolio standard that requires utilities to purchase increasing amounts of renewable energy certificates.

    “They’re all more or less moving in the same direction,” said Matt Kakley, a spokesman for ISO New England. That can make debates over longer term transmission planning and improving processes to determine who pays for what less fraught than elsewhere.

    Even before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s landmark order on transmission planning and cost allocation earlier this year, there was broad agreement among New England states on a new framework that was approved by FERC in July to plan for state renewable goals and how to allocate costs of associated network upgrades.

    “Our hope is that this kind of allows us to get to work on as a region, on some of the stuff that we know is coming,” Kakley said. If the states’ decarbonization goals are to be met, Kakley said, that means an estimated doubling of electricity use in New England over the next 30 years and a tripling of the winter energy peak.

    “On the transmission side, we’re in good shape right now,” Kakley said. “However, we know, if we’re going to move to a system that’s largely powered by offshore wind, that’s going to trigger the need for upgrades, not in the initial wave but when you start looking at the bigger quantities.”

    ‘It just defies logic’

    Despite those trends, there’s been reason to worry that offshore wind development might lag. For the past year, developers have struggled with supply chain problems and spiking costs driven by inflation, forcing some East Coast projects to be canceled or renegotiated.

    The projects have also been in some cases vehemently opposed by coastal communities and dogged by (spurious, according to marine mammal experts and federal agencies) accusations that they’re harming whales, along with lawsuits from fishermen and, in at least one case, preservationists worried about losing ocean views.

    This month, part of a blade broke off of a turbine that was part of Vineyard Wind 1, the nation’s first commercial scale offshore wind project, leaving fiberglass and foam debris to wash up on Nantucket beaches.

    The Maine Lobstermen’s Association, which represents hundreds of people who make a living hauling the famous crustacean out of the water for diners around the world, has been a major opponent of offshore wind potentially encroaching on fishing areas.

    The federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, which oversees offshore wind leases areas, is moving forward with a lease sale in the Gulf of Maine that largely excludes the areas used by the state’s lobster boats.

    But Patrice McCarron, the group’s policy director, isn’t backing off of criticizing the proposal.

    “Nobody in the fishing industry thinks the Gulf of Maine is a good place to develop offshore wind,” she said in an interview in June at the organization’s cramped offices in Kennebunk. “It’s one of the most productive ecosystems in the world. It supports one of the most valuable fisheries, if not the most valuable fishery in the nation, which is lobster.”

    A distorted view

    People who might not have seen offshore wind development up close can have a distorted sense of what it is in practice, she added.

    “If you don’t fish, you think of offshore wind as being something very green, something that’s going to solve climate change, something that’s good for the environment. If you’re a fisherman, you think about what it actually is, you know, 800-plus foot turbines floating on concrete blocks that are 300 feet by 300 feet with turbine blades that are at the length of a football field.”

    McCarron said the fishing industry also worries about loss of habitat, impacts on marine species, potential vibrations and other effects and, the uncertainty of floating offshore wind technology, which is what would be developed in the deep waters of the Gulf of Maine but is relatively rare still. (One offshore wind executive told States Newsroom that Gulf of Maine turbines aren’t expected to happen for about a decade.)

    “I don’t like the term ‘coexist,’” she said. “It just defies logic that you would industrialize a place that is so special and that fishermen have done such a great job of taking care of and stewarding. Nobody wants to see this built.”

    Solid fundamentals

    Less than 100 miles south of McCarron’s office, wind developers, state and federal officials, and others with ties to the industry were still optimistic on the prospects for offshore wind at a conference in Boston organized by Reuters.

    However, panels with names like “How to navigate growing pains,” “Risk mitigation,” “How to overcome critical supply chain bottlenecks,” “Confronting transmission complexities,” and “How to deal with misinformation” spoke to the rough seas companies pushing offshore wind projects have had to sail over the past year.

    There were also official as well as side-channel conversations about the election and what kind of blow a second Trump administration might deal to offshore wind.

    But the through line of the conference was that the fundamentals underlying offshore wind – a large untapped source of relatively steady clean energy close to the coastal cities that are big drivers of electric demand – remain strong. And state and local officials are still keen on the jobs and economic impact that can come from standing up a new American industry.

    “I would look to Virginia, as for me, giving me some optimism for the industry, for the future,” said Diane Leopold, chief operating officer of Virginia-based utility giant Dominion Energy, which is building the 2,600-megawatt Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project off the coast of Virginia Beach, the largest offshore wind farm under construction in the U.S.

    Bipartisan support

    Leopold touted the project’s strong bipartisan support. “It supports climate change. Large businesses in the state want renewable energy. We have a fast-growing load in the state, and offshore wind produces a lot of megawatt hours and it creates a diversity of supply that really helps grid reliability. And then, of course, offshore wind creates an enormous number of jobs and a lot of local economic activity.”

    Chris Wissemann, CEO of Diamond Offshore Wind, a developer, said the industry is on the path to recovery, with states and developers now negotiating agreements that include mechanisms to adjust prices to respond to inflation and other problems.

    “This has been a sobering event that is maybe once in a generation,” he said. “To a great extent what we’re doing in offshore wind as a country we haven’t done since nuclear power in the 60s and 70s and all of those projects were essentially ratepayers paid whatever they cost to build because you were doing them for the public benefit. I think a little of that needs to come into this market.”

    European companies, he added, sold regulators on the promise that they could build as easily as in Europe. “This has been sobering to a lot of the Europeans catching on that the U.S. is a bit different: building the supply chain here and getting things permitted, dealing, honestly, with our political dysfunction. It’s a real issue, right?”

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    By Robert Zullo | New Hampshire Bulletin

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  • Colorado weather: Afternoon storms threaten large hail, damaging wind, tornadoes

    Colorado weather: Afternoon storms threaten large hail, damaging wind, tornadoes

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    Afternoon thunderstorms en route to Colorado Wednesday afternoon threaten to bring large hail, damaging winds and tornado touchdowns, according to the National Weather Service.

    Although the metro area has a slight chance of afternoon storms, the worst weather is expected to hit Colorado’s Eastern Plains east of Fort Morgan, NWS forecasters said.

    “Large hail and damaging winds are the main hazards, but an isolated tornado can’t be ruled out,” forecasters said in a statement on social media. The weather service did not specify how big of hail or how strong of wind gusts are expected to hit the plains.

    The storms will start around 2:30 p.m. on Colorado’s eastern border, near Julesburg, and around 3:30 p.m. further west on the plains, including near Akron and Limon, according to NWS forecasters.

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    Lauren Penington

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  • Colorado weather: Denver showers, severe storms possible in plains

    Colorado weather: Denver showers, severe storms possible in plains

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    Severe thunderstorms with large hail, damaging winds, heavy rain and a tornado are possible in Colorado’s northeast corner Sunday and isolated showers are expected in the mountains and Denver metro area, according to the National Weather Service.

    Severe thunderstorms are possible in the eastern plains this afternoon, especially east of Sterling and Akron from 3 to 7 p.m. Hail larger than 2 inches in diameter with damaging wind greater than 60 mph, heavy rain and an isolated tornado is possible. Weak showers and thunderstorms are expected in north central and western Colorado, according to NWS forecasters.

    The Denver metro area will be mostly sunny today with a high of 89 degrees. Showers and thunderstorms between 3 and 5 p.m., with wind gusts up to 23 mph, are possible. The low tonight will be around 52 degrees.

    High temperatures in the Denver metro area are expected to continue for much of the week, with a high of 87 degrees Monday, 84 Tuesday and 91 Wednesday. Showers and thunderstorms may return Thursday night and Friday, according to the NWS.

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    Julianna O'Clair

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  • Colorado weather: Afternoon scattered showers, thunderstorms

    Colorado weather: Afternoon scattered showers, thunderstorms

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    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are expected this afternoon in the mountains and areas near and south of Interstate 70, according to the National Weather Service.

    Scattered thunderstorms may develop over the eastern slopes of the Front Range this afternoon with storms drifting east of the mountains this evening. Light rainfall is expected, but small hail and wind gusts up to 40 mph is possible.

    Today will be sunny with a high near 80 degrees in the Denver Metro area and a 20% chance of showers and thunderstorms after 3 p.m. and before 10 p.m. Tonight will dip to 52 degrees with gusts up to 18 mph.

    Wednesday will be mostly sunny with a high of 83 degrees. Showers and thunderstorms may return with a 30% chance of precipitation after noon. Rain may continue into that evening with a 20% chance of showers and thunderstorms before midnight and a low of 51 degrees.

    There will be a slight drop in temperatures Thursday with a high of 77 degrees and a 40% chance of showers and thunderstorms after noon and before midnight. Thursday night may dip to a low of 51 degrees.

    Afternoon showers and thunderstorms may continue in the Denver Metro area on Friday and Saturday.

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    Julianna O'Clair

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  • Toppled scaffolding, canceled beach festival, brush fires: Strong winds stir trouble for SoCal

    Toppled scaffolding, canceled beach festival, brush fires: Strong winds stir trouble for SoCal

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    Late spring winds whipped through Southern California over the weekend and fanned multiple brush fires while also dashing the hopes of music festival-goers in Redondo Beach.

    The forecast for Monday and Tuesday promises to bring more strong gusts in smaller pockets of the region. That includes the Interstate 5 corridor near the Grapevine and parts of Santa Barbara, according to the National Weather Service, with projected gusts reaching 40 mph to 50 mph in the evening.

    The Antelope Valley is also expected to receive wind gusts up to 30 or 40 mph around the same time, forecasts show.

    A storm system brought cooler temperatures and light rain alongside the formidable wind gusts to the region, starting Saturday. While the winds were nothing to sneeze at, the gusts are common in late spring.

    “It was a pretty good wind event, but it wasn’t what I would call record-breaking,” meteorologist David Gomberg with the National Weather Service in Oxnard said.

    Gusts reached 68 mph at a weather station in the mountains east of the Cajon Pass, 55 mph in Santa Barbara Island and 53 mph in Montecito Hills north of Santa Barbara over a 24-hour period starting Saturday, according to the National Weather Service.

    The widespread winds arrived with the weak storm front that passed through the region, Gomberg said.

    The timing was unfortunate for fans of My Morning Jacket and Courtney Barnett, whose performances at the BeachLife Festival in Redondo Beach were canceled along with the rest of the event’s third day due to the “serious wind event that put the general public at risk,” organizers said in a Facebook post. Fans were able to attend shows on Friday and Saturday, where Sting and Incubus were among the performers.

    “While we take extraordinary measures to keep our fans, staff and artists safe, and while absolutely none of our engineered structures or systems failed, winds quickly reached very dangerous speeds and we put safety first,” organizers said in their post.

    The wind did not discriminate with its ruination.

    Strong winds toppled a scaffolding four to five stories tall onto a set of power lines in the 1000 block of North St. Andrews Place in Hollywood on Sunday, according to the Los Angeles Fire Department. The scaffolding was erected against a building, but was swept out by the wind around 2 p.m., forcing emergency responders to divert traffic and pedestrians away from area.

    There were no reported injuries as firefighters responded to the scene, and no one was on the scaffolding during the incident, according to the fire department.

    LAFD firefighters also had to respond to a quarter-acre brush fire fanned by persistent winds in North Hollywood shortly before 3 p.m. near the 170 Freeway at Burbank Boulevard. Firefighters were able to contain and put out the fire within 25 minutes, LAFD said.

    Roughly 30 minutes later, firefighters responded to reports of a brush fire in the Sepulveda Basin in the 6100 block of North Woodley Avenue. Dry vegetation burned near an archery range, forcing employees and customers to temporarily leave the area; firefighters put out the blaze in about 70 minutes, LAFD said in a news alert. The flames were fanned by wind gusts of 20 mph to 30 mph, according to the fire department.

    Starting Wednesday, Southern California will see a light offshore event that will bring north and northeast winds to Los Angeles and Ventura counties.

    The winds will bring “very light and breezy conditions,” Gomberg said. Those winds will be coupled with decreased humidity and warmer temperatures, but thanks to the recent rains, vegetation in the region should not become too much of a fire hazard, he said.

    Southern Californians are not the only ones who will be battling headwinds. The National Weather Service in Sacramento cautions drivers that gusty winds are expected to kick up starting Tuesday from Vacaville north to Redding, with a high probability for wind gusts to reach 40 mph.

    No matter where drivers are heading during strong wind events, Gomberg said, they should be on the lookout for downed branches, fallen power lines and other wind-blown hazards in their general surroundings.

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    Nathan Solis

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  • Denver, it’s windy! So windy Red Rocks canceled its Hippo Campus concert

    Denver, it’s windy! So windy Red Rocks canceled its Hippo Campus concert

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    A big downed tree in Denver’s Washington Park, which fell over during recent strong winds. April 11, 2024.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Trash is flying through the air. Dust is pummeling Denverites’ eyes. And windchimes are having way too much fun.

    It’s another windy day in Denver and across the Front Range.

    Through Monday night, the National Weather Service warns gusts of wind could reach up to 60 miles per hour, and they could hit up to 75 miles per hour in parts of the mountains and foothills.

    If you were planning on lighting up the grill or littering a cigarette, don’t. Fire risks are up, and high winds make it easier for flames to spread.

    If you’re headed into the mountains, above 9,000 feet, you can expect to see snow blowing so hard you’ll have trouble seeing much else.

    If you were planning on flying, you might hit some turbulence in your travels. Denver International Airport is experiencing 632 flight delays and has had 29 cancelations, as of this writing.

    Red Rocks has canceled tonight’s Hippo Campus concert.

    “Due to dangerous high winds today and throughout the night, local authorities have made the decision to cancel tonight’s show,” the band wrote on social media. “We want nothing more than to be with you all tonight, but in order to ensure everyone’s safety we have no option but to cancel. Refunds will be coming soon from the point of purchase.”

    Fans, some of whom flew in for the concert, took to social media, asking the band to move the concert to an indoor venue, as has happened with previous shows. That is not in the cards.

    Canceling concerts at the venue has been a historically rare move, though it’s become more frequent since nearly a hundred guests were injured by hail last year during a very well forecast storm.

    A few things you need to know.

    This isn’t Denver’s first wind warning of the year.

    Last month, more than 100,000 people lost power, schools were shutdown and buildings caught fire, all keeping the Denver Fire Department busy.

    If debris falls onto your property, even if it’s not yours, you have to clean it up. Don’t just push it onto public property. Instead, here is the city’s list of arborists who can help you out.

    Tree branches will be picked up by the city during its routine trash collection and on large-item pick-up day.

    “Branches must be no larger than 4 inches in diameter, and they must be cut into lengths of 4 feet or less, bundled and tied, and weigh no more than 50 pounds,” note the city’s rules. “Customers may set out up to 10 bundles of branches on their large item pickup day.”

    If you don’t move debris from your property yourself, the city could remove it and charge you the cost.

    When you see fallen trees or branches in the street or public right of way, call 311 and report it with an address. The city will take it from there.

    If traffic lights aren’t working, treat intersections as four-way stops.

    Good luck out there.

    Update: This story has been updated with information about cancelations and delays at Denver International Airport.

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  • Colorado weather: Rain showers linger in Denver, over plains

    Colorado weather: Rain showers linger in Denver, over plains

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    The weekend-long series of thunderstorms and snowstorms across Colorado will linger Sunday, according to the National Weather Service.

    Lingering rain showers may remain over the plains Sunday in northeast and north central Colorado. Mountain snow showers will diminish throughout the day but a few additional inches of snow is possible. Widespread rain showers may return Wednesday with a few inches of snowfall for the northern mountains, according to NWS forecasters.

    There is a slight chance of rain showers in Denver on Sunday morning with possible showers and thunderstorms after noon. Sunday will be partly sunny with a high of 59 degrees and a 30% chance of precipitation. Wind gusts could reach 15 miles per hour.

    Sunday evening will be partly cloudy with a low of 39 degrees and a 20% chance of showers and thunderstorms before 9 p.m. Monday and Tuesday are expected to be mostly clear with highs around 70 degrees. Rain and thunderstorms return Wednesday with a 40% percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after noon and may continue throughout the week.

    Showers, high elevation snow showers and thunderstorms will develop later in the day in higher terrain portions of central, east and south central and southeast Colorado and move over the plains Sunday evening, according to the NWS.

    Lingering snow showers with light accumulation will continue over the mountains and higher terrain of Teller and El Paso County. Freezing fog is possible for portions of the Palmer Divide.

    There is a slight chance that some of these showers and thunderstorms may produce flash flooding for burn scar and urbanized areas. Wind gusts up to 50 miles per hour and dangerous cloud to ground lightning with hail up to half an inch in diameter is possible. There may be a few additional inches of snow over the southern Sangre de Cristo and Wet Mountains.

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    Julianna O'Clair

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  • Denver weather: Possible rain Monday evening, high fire danger across plains

    Denver weather: Possible rain Monday evening, high fire danger across plains

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    Rain is expected in Denver on Monday, but high fire danger persists throughout the plains and Palmer Divide while heavy snow is possible in the mountains, according to the National Weather Service.

    Denverites can expect breezy, sunny weather with a high of 74 degrees and wind gusts as high as 34 miles per hour on Monday. A 20 percent chance of showers after 3 p.m. increases to 60 percent with gusts as high as 37 miles per hour before 9 p.m. Monday night will hit a low of 48 with a chance of showers and thunderstorms before 9 p.m. and after midnight and a chance of showers between 9 p.m. and midnight.

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    Julianna O'Clair

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  • Small plane crashes in San Bernardino Mountains

    Small plane crashes in San Bernardino Mountains

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    Authorities are investigating a plane crash that occurred in the San Bernardino Mountains on Saturday night, officials said.

    The twin-engine Gulfstream AC95 crashed at about 8:15 p.m. in the mountains north of Palm Avenue, according to preliminary information from the Federal Aviation Administration. Officials did not know how many people were on board, or whether anyone survived.

    The remote area is difficult to access by foot or vehicle, and search efforts were initially hampered by rain and wind that lashed the area Saturday night, officials said.

    By Sunday morning, authorities had located a debris field north of Devil’s Canyon, and members of the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department Aviation Unit were on the scene along with search and rescue crews, said Gloria Huerta, a spokesperson with the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department. Rescue workers were being hoisted down a mountain and attempting to hike to the debris field, she said.

    This is a developing story. Check back for updates as more information becomes available.

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    Alex Wigglesworth

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  • Some Denver wind damage and outages will stick with us a while

    Some Denver wind damage and outages will stick with us a while

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    A fallen tree in Denver’s Alamo Placita Park seen on Sunday, April 8, 2024 after heavy winds.

    Dave Burdick/Denverite

    This weekend’s wind in Denver wrought damage across the region. More than 100,000 people lost power. Traffic lights went dark. Trees and powerlines blew down.

    “For the first time in Colorado, Xcel Energy conducted a public safety power shutoff,” the energy company wrote in a statement on Sunday. “More than 600 miles of lines were proactively de-energized, and before power is turned back on, our crews will need to visually inspect the lines to ensure it is safe to do so. Xcel Energy has more than 400 crew members working to restore power quickly and safely.”

    As of Monday, for many, power had still not been restored.  

    On Sunday morning, the city had 68 traffic signals not working — “the vast majority due to grid shutoffs by Xcel,” explained Department of Transportation and Infrastructure spokesperson Nancy Kuhn, on Monday afternoon. “By early this morning, there were outages at only four locations, so those were all coming back on.” 

    A traffic signal at Colfax Avenue and Ogden Street was so damaged it needs to be replaced.

    Kuhn’s advice for those who encounter a downed power line: “Stay clear of downed lines and report them immediately to Xcel Energy at 1-800-895-1999. If a power line is in contact with a tree or any other object, stay away and call 911 immediately.”

    And people did call.

    Over the weekend, Denver Fire Department was trying to keep up with the demand.

    “We saw a number of calls for reports of downed power lines and calls for broken windows or flying debris,” said Denver Fire Captain J.D. Chism. 

    The Tava Waters Apartments, at Mississippi and Valentia, caught fire, and partially collapsed. 

    Putting out the flames was more challenging because of the wind, Chism explained.

    Many Denverites are cleaning up branches, fallen trees and trash — or wondering how to do so.

    Property owners are tasked with cleaning up debris that falls on private property and is blocking the public right of way. The city is asking people not to put the debris on public land. Denver Forestry has a list of tree-care contractors who can help out. 

    “If emergency removal of a fallen tree or tree branch is needed to clear a street, call 311 to report the specific address of the location,” Kuhn wrote in a statement. “The city will evaluate and prioritize the removal of the obstruction, and when necessary, the city will remove the encumbrance, and the cost of the work will be billed to the responsible property owner.”

    And if you have extra tree branches, DOTI will collect them as part of its regular trash and compost services.

    There are a few rules to keep in mind. 

    “Branches must be no larger than 4 inches in diameter, and they must be cut into lengths of 4 feet or less, bundled and tied, and weigh no more than 50 pounds,” according to the city’s rules. “Customers may set out up to 10 bundles of branches on their large item pickup day.”

    In short: Break out the saw and have patience.

    In Lakewood, there’s a temporary tree limb drop-off site from now through Monday, April 15 at the city greenhouse, 9556 W. Yale Ave.

    “Residents must be able to unload the limbs without assistance. The limb drop-off site is for storm damage only; yard debris will not be accepted,” the city said in announcing the site.

    A few schools are still waiting for answers, too.

    Monday, students at John F. Kennedy High School, Rocky Mountain Prep Ruby Hill Elementary, and Traylor Academy Elementary stayed home, since power had not been restored in their areas. 

    Would those students be back in class on Tuesday? 

    “We don’t know yet,” DPS spokesperson Scott Pribble told Denverite. “ There is no power to the schools. They are part of the power outage that Xcel Energy is dealing with.”

    As of Monday afternoon, Xcel had no timeline for when those schools’ power would be restored. 

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  • Northern California forecast: Lower snow levels for Saturday, chance for a Valley thunderstorm

    Northern California forecast: Lower snow levels for Saturday, chance for a Valley thunderstorm

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    Heavy snow and high winds will continue to make travel dangerous in the mountains on Saturday. KCRA 3 is calling Saturday an Alert Day because of hazardous snowy conditions above 5000 feet in the Sierra. Unnecessary travel is strongly discouraged in that area.The snow level has also dropped much lower, leaving some Foothills communities with slippery conditions to start the day. Expect the snow level to hover around 2500 feet during the day Saturday. Wet snow will be on and off between 2500 feet and 4000 feet this afternoon and evening. Related | See our liveblog of snow impacts here. Get a closer look at the Foothills snow forecast here. Winter Snowstorm TimelineHeavy snow will continue all day Saturday above 5000 feet, along with gusty winds. This will create blizzard-like conditions at times over the mountain passes.| RELATED CONTENT | What does a blizzard warning for the Sierra actually mean?An additional two to three feet of snow is expected above 6000 feet on Saturday. Another foot of snow is possible on Sunday. Travel will be somewhat easier over the passes on Sunday, but drivers should still expect significant slow-downs as crews work to remove snow.In the Foothills, communities at 4000 feet can expect up to 18 inches of snow on Saturday. Another three to six inches of wet snow is possible Sunday. Below 4000 feet, wet snow will come in on and off rounds, accumulating a couple of inches at a time. Communities at 3000 feet can expect up to six inches of snow Saturday with another two to four inches possible Sunday.RainSaturday morning will be mainly dry in the Valley, but afternoon showers and a few soaking thunderstorms are possible. Most Valley locations will see less than a quarter of an inch of rain Saturday, but areas that see thunderstorms could pick up closer to a half inch of rain. Flooding issues are not expected, but there may be some isolated ponding on roadways.There is a chance for a few more showers on Sunday, but rain is expected to be less widespread compared to Saturday.WindsSaturday will be another breezy day with the strongest winds expected over the crest of the Sierra. Open areas in the mountains could see gusts over 50 mph throughout the day. In the Valley, a southwesterly breeze may gust to 30 mph Saturday afternoon. Winds will be a bit lighter on Sunday, but blowing snow may still reduce visibility in the Sierra. Get California storm-readyDownload our app for the latest breaking news and weather alertsTrack live California Doppler radarSee our live traffic mapSend us your weather videos and photosBe prepared for road closures: Download Caltrans’ QuickMap app or check the latest QuickMap road conditions here. This will also show chain control information.Follow our KCRA weather team on social mediaChief meteorologist Mark Finan on Facebook and TwitterMeteorologist Tamara Berg on Facebook and TwitterMeteorologist Dirk Verdoorn on FacebookMeteorologist/Climate Reporter Heather Waldman on Facebook and TwitterWatch our forecasts on TV or onlineHere’s where to find our latest video forecast. You can also watch a livestream of our latest newscast here. The banner on our website turns red when we’re live.We’re also streaming on the Very Local app for Roku, Apple TV or Amazon Fire TV.

    Heavy snow and high winds will continue to make travel dangerous in the mountains on Saturday.

    KCRA 3 is calling Saturday an Alert Day because of hazardous snowy conditions above 5000 feet in the Sierra. Unnecessary travel is strongly discouraged in that area.

    The snow level has also dropped much lower, leaving some Foothills communities with slippery conditions to start the day. Expect the snow level to hover around 2500 feet during the day Saturday. Wet snow will be on and off between 2500 feet and 4000 feet this afternoon and evening.

    Winter Snowstorm Timeline

    Heavy snow will continue all day Saturday above 5000 feet, along with gusty winds. This will create blizzard-like conditions at times over the mountain passes.

    | RELATED CONTENT | What does a blizzard warning for the Sierra actually mean?

    An additional two to three feet of snow is expected above 6000 feet on Saturday. Another foot of snow is possible on Sunday. Travel will be somewhat easier over the passes on Sunday, but drivers should still expect significant slow-downs as crews work to remove snow.

    In the Foothills, communities at 4000 feet can expect up to 18 inches of snow on Saturday. Another three to six inches of wet snow is possible Sunday.

    Below 4000 feet, wet snow will come in on and off rounds, accumulating a couple of inches at a time. Communities at 3000 feet can expect up to six inches of snow Saturday with another two to four inches possible Sunday.

    Rain

    Saturday morning will be mainly dry in the Valley, but afternoon showers and a few soaking thunderstorms are possible.

    Most Valley locations will see less than a quarter of an inch of rain Saturday, but areas that see thunderstorms could pick up closer to a half inch of rain. Flooding issues are not expected, but there may be some isolated ponding on roadways.

    There is a chance for a few more showers on Sunday, but rain is expected to be less widespread compared to Saturday.

    Winds

    Saturday will be another breezy day with the strongest winds expected over the crest of the Sierra.

    Open areas in the mountains could see gusts over 50 mph throughout the day.

    In the Valley, a southwesterly breeze may gust to 30 mph Saturday afternoon.

    Winds will be a bit lighter on Sunday, but blowing snow may still reduce visibility in the Sierra.

    Get California storm-ready

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    Here’s where to find our latest video forecast. You can also watch a livestream of our latest newscast here. The banner on our website turns red when we’re live.

    We’re also streaming on the Very Local app for Roku, Apple TV or Amazon Fire TV.

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  • From Mammoth to Tahoe, powerful blizzard could sock Sierra with up to 12 feet of snow

    From Mammoth to Tahoe, powerful blizzard could sock Sierra with up to 12 feet of snow

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    A powerful storm taking aim at California starting Thursday could bring the strongest blizzard of the winter for the Sierra Nevada, potentially dumping 5 to 12 feet of snow at elevations 5,000 feet above sea level.

    “Even by Sierra standards, this is shaping up to be a highly impactful, major winter storm,” the National Weather Service office in Reno said. “If these snow totals hold, this will easily be the biggest storm of the season.”

    That includes the possibility of 1 to 3 feet of snow for communities along Highway 395 in Mono County, with Mammoth Lakes and June Lakes potentially getting nearly 4 feet of snow. There’s a strong chance of 4 feet of snow along the Sierra crest around the Tahoe Basin, and more than 3 feet in places like South Lake Tahoe, Incline Village and Tahoe City, forecasters said.

    Winds on the ridge tops of California’s mightiest mountain range “could easily exceed 120 mph,” and “could lead to blizzard conditions with near-zero visibility at times.”

    Forecasters urged people to take advantage of calm weather through Wednesday to prepare ahead of the incoming storm. They warned travel is expected to be nearly impossible from about 4 a.m. Thursday through Sunday morning. “If you attempt to travel, be prepared for whiteout conditions & extended road closures. Bring extra food, water, & warm clothing,” the National Weather Service office in Sacramento posted on social media.

    Yosemite Valley could see snow showers on Saturday, the weather service office in Hanford said. “Snow may be heavy at times.”

    For Los Angeles County, the storm is expected to bring a slight chance of rain late Friday, becoming likely on Saturday and possibly lasting through Sunday morning.

    That storm could bring 0.75 to 1.5 inches of rain to the coast and valleys, and 1 to 3 inches in the mountains. But there’s also the possibly of a more dry scenario, with as little as 0.25 to 0.5 inches of rain in the coast and valleys, and 0.5 to 1 inch of rain in the mountains.

    The weekend storm will be a cold one for L.A. County; there could be a dusting of snow in some areas at elevations below 3,000 feet. “This will likely be the coldest air mass we’ve had in some time with frost/freeze concerns possible for sheltered valleys Sunday and possibly a bit more widespread into Monday morning,” the weather service office in Oxnard said.

    Rain could return to the San Francisco Bay Area starting late Thursday and continue through Saturday.

    “Overall it’s just going to be nasty outside with cold temperatures, gusty wind and periods of moderate rain,” the National Weather Service office in Monterey said. “That being said, the actual impacts look mostly minor with wind gusts in the 25-35 mph range and only a moderate amount of rainfall, spread out over a few days.”

    Winds could be a problem in the Sacramento Valley. Forecasters warned of winds gusting from 35 to 55 mph that could trigger power outages, especially from Marysville in Yuba County and northward.

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    Rong-Gong Lin II

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  • SMUD reporting over 4,000 power outages as severe weather begins to come down on Sacramento

    SMUD reporting over 4,000 power outages as severe weather begins to come down on Sacramento

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    (FOX40.COM) — While severe weather was forecasted for Monday in the Sacramento region, plenty of rain and windy conditions came down on the area on Sunday night and has left over 4,000 SMUD customers without power, per the utility’s outage map.

    According to SMUD, over 4,000 customers are without power in Sacramento as of 10:15 p.m. on Sunday.

    Although the day began dry with some windy conditions, but once the sun went down, the intensity of the rain went up.

    An image of SMUD’s outage map at 10:21 p.m. on Sunday night. (Image Credit: SMUD Outage Map)

    Video shared to social media by the FOX40 News Team shows rain pouring down in East and South Sacramento on Sunday night.

    Craig Shoemaker, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service (NWS) said this current storm system is “very complex” and has “numerous weather elements that could cause hazardous conditions across Northern California.”

    Those hazardous conditions include flooding, power outages, and maybe even some tornadoes.

    According to NWS, windy conditions are expected to last through Tuesday. The agency is also encouraging those caught in the rain to monitor the weather before heading outside while the storm system moves through the area.

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    Aydian Ahmad

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  • Weekend storm in Northern California brings downpour of rain, snow, winds for days to come

    Weekend storm in Northern California brings downpour of rain, snow, winds for days to come

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    (FOX40.COM) –A beneficial storm that includes soaking rain, some snow, and gusty winds is making its way to Northern California, according to FOX40’s chief meteorologist, Adam Epstein.
    First of two storms to hit Sacramento area on Saturday

    “A weak atmospheric river will impact our area on Saturday. It will begin with showers in the morning, then heavier rain in the midday/afternoon,” Epstein said.

    The heaviest rainfall is forecast from 3-8 p.m. on Saturday followed by tapers overnight.

    Epstein said there will be a “solid soaking of rain, but no flooding concerns,” with an estimate of .25 – .75 inches of rain forecast to fall on Saturday, however, things change on Sunday.

    Gusty winds are also in the forecast.

    “It will be breezy, but gusts should remain below a damaging threshold,” Epstein said. “Gusts will be near 30 mph.”

    A more impactful storm is forecast to last from Sunday to Tuesday. Showers are expected to return Sunday afternoon with heavy rain possible on Sunday evening, according to Epstein. A flood watch will be in effect for Sunday’s storm.

    Periods of heavy rain are also forecast for Monday which will likely be accompanied by thunderstorms in the Valley and Foothills. One to three inches of rain is forecast in the Valley and two to five in the Foothills.

    For those in the Sierra, light snow is forecast to fall on Saturday.

    “Snow totals won’t turn many heads. I’m forecasting a modest two-eight inches of snow,” Epstein said. “There’s a ‘Winter Weather Advisory’ in effect above 6000 feet from 10 a.m. on Saturday to 4 a.m. Sunday, indicating difficult travel in that window.”

    A stronger snow storm will arrive late Sunday and last through Tuesday, according to Epstein. One to three feet of snow is forecast to fall from 4 p.m. on Sunday to 10 a.m. on Wednesday.

    “Snow level begins high near 7000 feet Sunday night and Monday morning,” Epstein said. “Drops to 5500 feet by the end of Monday and lingers near there through Tuesday.”

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    Veronica Catlin

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  • Dangerous winds thrash Southern California; snow and ice threaten Interstate 5 closure

    Dangerous winds thrash Southern California; snow and ice threaten Interstate 5 closure

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    Dangerous winds continued to thrash Southern California on Sunday, causing some power outages in Los Angeles neighborhoods and triggering warnings that Interstate 5 near the Grapevine could be shut down because of snow and ice.

    A wind advisory remained in effect across Los Angeles, Ventura and Santa Barbara counties until 7 p.m. Sunday, with gusts ranging from 25 mph to 50 mph across the region. Gusts of up 70 mph are possible in mountain areas, said meteorologist Robbie Munroe of the National Weather Service.

    Wind advisories remained in effect in San Diego, Riverside and San Bernardino counties until Sunday at noon, officials said. There is also a slight chance of rain Sunday night in the coastal and valley regions.

    Temperatures across the region ranged from the low to mid-50s on Sunday and were expected to drop into the 40s overnight, according to the weather service. Valley areas could see temperatures dip to the low 30s, Munroe said.

    “Take extra care with pets and plants,” he said.

    The cold air has also brought snowfall, icy conditions and fog along Interstate 5 near the Grapevine, which has made for hazardous driving conditions, prompting authorities to warn drivers about delays and possible closure of the busy roadway. A crash involving dozens of vehicles on a foggy stretch of Interstate 5 near Bakersfield on Saturday left two people dead and nine others injured.

    The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power reported power outages throughout its service area on Sunday affecting more than 2,500 customers, according to its website. Southern California Edison’s website reported 17 outages in Los Angeles County affecting more than 3,600 customers, and three outages affecting 384 customers in Orange County.

    Although the latest cold front might remind Southern Californians of last year’s massive winter storm, Munroe said that current conditions decrease the odds of witnessing a similar white winter.

    “This is a pretty cold system, but it lacks the combination of cold and moisture that we saw last year,” he said.

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    Colleen Shalby

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  • Not Healthy

    Not Healthy

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    Dear diary, today is the fourth day of this logging contract, I have 10 days to go until my first break, my skin is wind burned, the arthritis in my hands means I can barely hold a coffee cup and I think I’m starting to have paranoid delusions. The fae call to me.

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  • Antelope Valley faces hard freeze Sunday night; rain forecast for L.A. this week

    Antelope Valley faces hard freeze Sunday night; rain forecast for L.A. this week

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    The Antelope Valley is facing a hard freeze warning for the early morning hours on Monday, with temperatures expected to plunge below freezing overnight, according to the National Weather Service.

    The temperatures could damage outdoor plumbing and harm crops and unprotected pets or livestock in the Antelope Valley, including the areas of Palmdale, Lancaster and Lake Los Angeles, the weather service warned. It recommended that outdoor pipes be wrapped, drained or allowed to drip slowly and that in-ground sprinkler systems be drained and any above-ground pipes covered to protect them from freezing.

    Lancaster had a low of 22 degrees Fahrenheit early Sunday morning, said David Gomberg, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Oxnard. The Antelope Valley is facing chillier temperatures than the rest of the region because it is more protected from wind at night, causing “radiational cooling,” Gomberg said. “Areas that are more wind sheltered get exceptionally cold.”

    “Most other areas of Southern California see at least a little bit of wind, which modifies the temperature,” Gomberg explained, with temperatures in most valley areas in the 40s and the Los Angeles coast and basin in the low to mid 50s, “not too unusual for this time of year.”

    Some areas, including the Santa Clarita Valley, Calabasas, Agoura Hills and the Malibu coast, were under a wind advisory Sunday, with gusts of up to 45 miles per hour expected. The National Weather Service warned that the high winds could make driving difficult and blow down tree limbs, potentially leading to power outages.

    A 20% chance of rain — mostly intermittent showers — is forecast for the Los Angeles County region beginning Wednesday and continuing through Friday, according to the NWS. Temperatures will range from the low 40s to high 60s.

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    Emily Alpert Reyes

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  • Wind-whipped Highland fire swells to 2,200 acres in Riverside County; 3 structures destroyed

    Wind-whipped Highland fire swells to 2,200 acres in Riverside County; 3 structures destroyed

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    At least three structures were destroyed and six others damaged as a wildfire continued to burn Tuesday in Riverside County, where about 4,000 people were under mandatory evacuation orders.

    The Highland fire began around 12:37 p.m. Monday in the unincorporated neighborhood of Aguanga and quickly exploded in size as it met with strong Santa Ana winds and dried vegetation. At least 15 additional structures are threatened by the 2,200-acre blaze, which had 0% containment, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

    More than 300 firefighters are battling the fire from the air and ground, according to Rob Roseen, a public information officer with Cal Fire in Riverside County.

    Winds are coming out of the southeast and pushing the fire northwest, although there is some spread in all directions, he said. A wind advisory remains in effect until 8 p.m. across much of the Inland Empire, including Riverside County, with gusts of up to 50 mph possible, according to the National Weather Service.

    “We’re looking at single-digit humidity this afternoon,” said Philip Gonsalves, a meteorologist with the weather service in San Diego, which includes Riverside County in its coverage area. “So from a weather perspective, conditions are favorable for fire growth.”

    Evacuation orders remain in place for residents south of Sage Road and Golden Eagle Drive, north of Cottonwood Creek, west of Boulder Vista and east of Becker Lane, as well as residents south of Highway 371, west of Sorensen Road and north of the San Diego County line.

    An additional evacuation order was issued at 6:20 a.m. Tuesday for residents south of Highway 79, north of the San Diego County line, east of Forest Route 8S07 and west of Crosely Truck Trail.

    An evacuation warning is in effect for areas east of Vail Lake, west of Shirley Way, south of Pueblo Drive and Exa Ely Road, and north of David Street. An evacuation warning is also in effect for areas west of the Cahuilla Tribal Reservation Boundary and north of County Line Road.

    A reception center has been opened at Great Oak High School in Temecula. Large and small animals can be taken to the San Jacinto Animal Shelter.

    In total, approximately 1,139 homes are under evacuation orders, and 489 homes under an evacuation warning, Cal Fire officials said.

    “We just ask that the public please remain vigilant,” public information officer Maggie Cline De La Rosa said in a video update. “If you received an evacuation order, please leave. If you received an evacuation warning, please continue to pay close attention to those.”

    The fire is burning in an area that only recently was saturated by Tropical Storm Hilary, a rare storm that tore through swaths of Southern California in August. Gonsalves, of the weather service, said the storm’s rainfall contributed to “green-up” in the area, or the growth of new grasses, which may have subsequently dried out and could be feeding the fire.

    It’s something experts warned of in the weeks after Hilary made landfall. Nick Schuler, Cal Fire’s deputy director of communications and emergency incident awareness, said in September that fire season was not over and that a prolonged wind event could still fan a blaze.

    “When you have Santa Ana winds — winds that come from the east and blow to the west — it dries everything out,” Schuler said. “If you look at some of the largest fires in California’s history, especially Southern California, they started later in the year.”

    The dry, windy conditions fueled several other small fires across the state, including the Lizzie fire in San Luis Obispo, which was 35% contained at 100 acres Tuesday morning. Crews in San Diego were also battling a small brush fire near Interstate 805 in Kearny Mesa, according to Fox 5 San Diego.

    In the unincorporated area of Aromas, on the border of San Benito and Monterey counties, a small fire ignited around 2 a.m. Tuesday and prompted brief evacuation orders. The fire was contained to a small water district maintenance yard, officials said.

    Roseen, of Cal Fire, said Tuesday that the Highland fire is burning in light grasses and medium brush. Remote mountaintop cameras in the area showed billowing plumes of white smoke.

    “We’ll have an increased augmentation of ground resources today,” he said. “They’ll be bolstered by numerous resources that will be working in the area, as well as our fixed-wing and helicopter assets that will be working over the fire throughout the day to try to build some containment on this.”

    Roseen could not immediately confirm what types of structures had been destroyed. The cause of the fire remains under investigation.

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    Hayley Smith

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  • Tropical Storm Ophelia to bring wet, windy and cold weekend to New York City

    Tropical Storm Ophelia to bring wet, windy and cold weekend to New York City

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    Tropical Storm 16 was given the name Ophelia Friday afternoon as it gained strength in the Mid-Atlantic and made its way up the East Coast.

    Ophelia took shape south of North Carolina and was moving north at 10–15 mph, the Weather Channel reported around 3 p.m. The storm is forecasted to produce heavy winds, rain and accumulation along the Eastern Seaboard going into the weekend.

    That may lead to a messy few days in the tri-state area. The Jersey Shore could see Saturday flooding and 60 mph winds, according to NBC News.

    NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER

    Arrival time of tropical-storm-force winds, as of Friday, Sept. 22, 2023.

    The Weather Channel says New York City will likely see rainfall late Friday continuing into Monday. 1010 WINS predicts a chilly Saturday with 35 mph winds, a high of 60 degrees and sporadic rain throughout the weekend as the storm creeps along. The heaviest showers are expected to come during the day Saturday.

    Ophelia is the 15th named storm of the 2023 Atlantic hurricane season — 11 of which have occurred since Aug. 20. A 16th storm that formed earlier in the year wasn’t given a moniker.

    Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin isn’t taking the storm lightly.

    “I declared a State of Emergency in advance of Potential Tropical Cyclone 16,” Youngkin said on social media. “I encourage all Virginians and visitors to keep up with the latest forecast for their area from a trusted source, make a plan, and have their emergency kits ready.”

    Emergency Management Officials in North Carolina warned residents in the eastern and central part of the state that “gusty winds combined with saturated soils could result in downed trees and power outages, along with the possibility of flash flooding and coastal flooding.”

    The Atlantic hurricane season ends Nov. 30, according to the National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration.

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    Brian Niemietz

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