Nashville, Middle Tennessee and National Weather Service
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Golfweek |
Gov. Bill Lee issued a state of emergency Wednesday ahead of the storms, and the Tennessee Department of Health reported two weather-related deaths in McNairy and Obion counties in West Tennessee.
U.S. News & World Report |
The prolonged deluge, which could dump more than a foot (30 centimeters) of rain over a four-day period, “is an event that happens once in a generation to once in a lifetime,” the National Weather Ser...
Tennessean |
Concerns over flooding in West and Middle Tennessee are part of "a multi-day catastrophic and potentially historic heavy rainfall event," the National Weather Service said earlier this week.
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Districts shutter Fri. amid severe weather threat
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USA TODAY |
Some Middle Tennessee students will have long weekends as school districts began canceling Friday classes Thursday afternoon amid an ongoing threat of severe weather.
Yahoo |
Schools across Northern Michigan are shutting their doors for the remainder of the week as communities grapple with the lingering impacts of this week’s devastating ice storms.
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Selmer, tornado and Tennessee
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The Tennessean Nashville |
Selmer, along with dozens of communities in Tennessee, received multiple tornado warnings overnight.
Yahoo |
The National Weather Service has confirmed at least one tornado hit Southwest Ohio during early morning storms on Thursday.
Yahoo |
Forecasters have warned of historic flooding in the central US this week, anticipating multiple bouts of heavy rainfall and extreme thunderstorms.
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1h
Action News 5 on MSN‘Don’t let your guard down’: Gov. Lee urges Tennesseans to remain vigilant as severe weather continuesTennessee Governor Bill Lee was joined by officials with the National Weather Service (NWS) and Tennessee Emergency Management Agency (TEMA) to provide an update on severe weather impacts across the state Thursday.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WSMV) - Officials confirm at least four people have died in severe storms that moved through the Volunteer State Wednesday night. The Tennessee Emergency Management Agency (TEMA) first confirmed one weather-related death in McNairy County, one in Obion County and another in Hardeman County.
Attorneys representing families of the Impact Plastics employees and contractor who died strongly disagreed with the findings.
Officials are watching the Cumberland, Red, Duck and Buffalo rivers in Middle Tennessee, with flooding expected to peak on Friday.
Governor Bill Lee has sought an emergency declaration for Tennessee as severe storms kill five and leave thousands without power.
Thousands of people have no power in Wisconsin, Michigan and Indiana after freezing rain or severe storms brought down trees and power lines.
A destructive weather event will continue for millions of people across the Mid-South on Thursday, with the marathon storm persisting until Sunday.