A winter weather advisory has been issued that will run from 10 p.m. Friday to 7 a.m. Saturday. The National Weather Service is predicting 1 to 2 inches of snow will accumulate. The snow could create slippery road conditions,
The National Weather Service has issued a winter weather advisory for the Fredericksburg area and a hazardous weather statement for all of Northern Virginia as another round of wintry weather moves through tonight.
Several states were under winter storm warnings or winter weather advisories from the NWS as of early Thursday.
A winter storm brought snow to northern Virginia on Monday, January 6, as weather officials issued travel warnings for the region.This footage was captured by Jose Garcia, who said that there was between 1-2 inches of snow on the ground in Manassas.
Several inches of snow are expected to land in the nation's capital ahead of Trump's pre-inaugural rally on Sunday.
Roads are expected to be slick Sunday morning due to black ice. NWS has ended winter weather advisories and warnings.
West Virginia’s Northern Panhandle counties are under a Winter Weather Advisory and Hazardous Weather Outlook. Eastern Panhandle counties could get 5-9 inches of snow with one-tenth of an inch of ice.
Projected snowfall totals have increased as a fast-moving Nor’easter nears the region, with some locations now expected to see as much as a foot of accumulation. Snowfall will begin in the central Appalachians and parts of Virginia Saturday night,
Dangerously cold weather spread over the Midwest on Saturday and is headed toward the East Coast, where temperatures well below seasonal norms are expected starting late Sunday and into next week.
The NWS extreme cold warning for Duluth said: "The dangerously cold wind chills as low as 40 below zero could cause frostbite on exposed skin in as little as 10 minutes. Frostbite and hypothermia will occur if unprotected skin is exposed to these temperatures. An extended period of freezing temperatures could cause ruptured water pipes."
The weather conditions are expected to be so intense that Donald Trump decided to move his inauguration inside the Capitol Rotunda on Monday, saying he didn't want "to see people hurt, or injured, in any way.