Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Watch canceled after storm moves south

- Joe Taschler

Forecaster­s have canceled the winter storm watch that had been in effect for southern Wisconsin; the storm took a southward turn overnight and kept heading south during the day Monday.

Far southern Wisconsin, including Racine and Kenosha, might see a couple of inches of snow.

Most everywhere else in southern Wisconsin is expected to see only a trace, if any, snow.

It is unlikely, given the latest forecast informatio­n, that the storm would swing back to the north and bring significant snow to southern Wisconsin, said Aidan Kuroski, a meteorolog­ist at the National Weather Service in Sullivan.

“The system has really, really shifted to the south,” Kuroski said. “We expect any further changes will continue to be farther to the south rather than to the north.”

If you have travel plans in the Chicago

area, you’ll want to check the forecast for that region.

“Northeaste­rn Illinois is still going to get hit pretty hard, but it’s shifted southward enough where we’re just not going to see that much across southern Wisconsin,” Kuroski said.

Forecaster­s issued the winter storm watch based on what computer forecast models were saying about the storm.

On Sunday, those forecast models were indicating that at least 8 inches of snow could fall across southern Wisconsin, and that was on the low end of the prediction­s, Kuroski said.

Then the storm veered south, and forecaster­s only had to cancel the winter storm watch — as opposed to a warning or advisory having to be canceled once the snow began — or didn’t begin — to fall.

“It’s something that does happen every year with a (winter) storm or two,” Kuroski said.

“Lately, the models have been not so great with these last two systems.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States