The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Storm system that hit Calif. moving into the Midwest

- By Kelly P. Kissel

More than 50 million people are being warned to watch for high winds or even tornadoes as a storm system that pummeled California this week moves into the Midwest. After the system clears, snow and cold could replace the springlike conditions much of the region has enjoyed for the better part of a week.

The severe storms will ramp up Friday from Detroit to Nashville, Tennessee. Meteorolog­ist Patrick Marsh of the Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Oklahoma, said Thursday that the weather pattern is more typical of April or May.

“The calendar says it’s not really spring, but if you look at the air temperatur­es, it looks like spring. That’s what the atmosphere is operating on,” said Marsh, the center’s warning coordinati­on meteorolog­ist.

Moist air from the Gulf of Mexico will send temperatur­es toward 70 degrees in northern Indiana and southern Michigan on Friday, which is about 30 degrees above normal. “This is pretty much you would expect a couple months from now,” Marsh said.

People typically think of tornadoes in the spring, though in the Southeast they can come any time of year. So far in 2017, there have been swarms of twisters in Louisiana and Georgia.

“In Oklahoma, every April, May and June I really need to be paying attention. But in Birmingham, Alabama, I’ve got a threat year-round,” he said. In the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes region, the weather Friday will hit an area that would normally be worrying about snow.

“It’s not out of the question that there could be snow this weekend in the same area,” Marsh said.

The storm arriving Friday is part of the same system that brought heavy rains to California this week and snow to Wyoming on Thursday.

Blizzard warnings were posted for the northern Plains beginning overnight Thursday. Northern Indiana and Michigan have snow in the forecast for Saturday, while there’s a fire danger in the southern Plains “all from the same system,” Marsh said.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Residents wash their belongings as floodwater­s recede along Coyote Creek in San Jose, California. Thousands of people evacuated from a flood in San Jose returned home Thursday amid warnings to be careful about hygiene.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Residents wash their belongings as floodwater­s recede along Coyote Creek in San Jose, California. Thousands of people evacuated from a flood in San Jose returned home Thursday amid warnings to be careful about hygiene.

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