Warmer temperatures will filter into the Kansas City area on Wednesday, but the National Weather Service said the metro will remain cold. “Good news: It is exactly 30 degrees warmer in KC at 5 AM than it was yesterday at 5 AM!!” the weather service said in a post on Facebook. Temperatures were -8 degrees on Tuesday and 22 on Wednesday.
Early spring-like weather is expected in Kansas City this week, but the warmer temperatures raise some concerns, according to the National Weather Service. On Monday, temperatures are expected to climb into the mid-40s in the metro,
Anyone heading outside Tuesday should bundle up due to dangerous wind chill values, the National Weather Service said.
A cold front is expected to bring sub-zero temperatures this coming weekend to northeast Kansas, the National Weather Service says.
The coldest air of the season will begin filtering into the area Friday night, according to the National Weather Service. From Sunday to Tuesday, wind Chills are expected to bottom out between -10 and -20 degrees each morning and only reach the single digits in the afternoon.
The National Weather Service says several locations in Kansas saw record-breaking cold temperatures on Tuesday.
Kickoff is at 5:30 CST on Sunday at the Chiefs' Arrowhead Stadium.
Tuesday brought Topeka its lowest temperatures in almost four years, with the mercury plunging to minus 12 degrees.
The AccuWeather forecast calls for hazy moonlight in the 6 p.m. hour, evolving to mostly clear skies, with a high around 32 degrees at kickoff. The wind forecast is a bit stronger at 5 mph, but below the NFL average of 7 mph and paired with a 0% chance of precipitation.
It should be cold, but nothing like the current arctic chill, when the Bills play in the AFC Championship Game on Sunday.
An animal control deputy in Buncombe County shot and killed a dog that was attacking him, according to the sheriff's office.
More rain fell Monday on parts of Southern California after causing mudflows over the weekend, helping firefighters but boosting the risk of toxic ash runoff in areas scorched