WASHINGTON – Washington, D.C., Philadelphia, New York City and other heavily populated areas across the Interstate 95 corridor in the mid-Atlantic and Northeast are expected to see potentially damaging severe weather Thursday, part of a sprawling threat that covers more than 134 million people.
Warm temperatures and high humidity across the region will set the stage for thunderstorms set to fire Thursday afternoon, threatening the evening commute with damaging wind gusts of 60 mph being the primary threat.
These storms will be driven by a low-pressure system moving out of the Midwest, Great Lakes and Ohio Valley that left a trail of destruction Wednesday.
More than 93,000 power outages were reported in Indiana, and more than 73,000 have been reported in Ohio as of Thursday morning.
TORNADO DAMAGE SEEN IN OHIO VALLEY AS SEVERE STORMS KNOCK OUT POWER TO NEARLY HALF A MILLION
Severe storms produced reports of tornadoes in Missouri, Illinois, Michigan and Iowa on Wednesday. A 71-mph wind gust that brought down powerlines was recorded in Owen, Indiana on Wednesday night.
A broad severe weather threat covers parts of the Southeast through parts of Maine Thursday.
NOAA’s Storm Prediction Center has issued a Level 3 out of 5 risk of severe thunderstorms covering the densely populated metro areas of Washington, D.C., Baltimore, Philadelphia, and Newark, New Jersey.
A Level 2 out of 5 threat covers New York City and a wide swathe of the Northeast, as well as parts of Virginia and North Carolina to the south.
Severe thunderstorms are expected to fire up during the mid to late afternoon hours, threatening the evening commute and air travel at some of the country’s busiest airports.
Damaging wind gusts of up to 60 mph are expected to be the mode of severe weather threat, with the greatest risk in the same area where the Level 3 out of 5 risk was issued in the mid-Atlantic.
According to the FOX Forecast Center, there is a chance of a few tornadoes from New York City north to Burlington, Vermont, closer to an area of low pressure and higher wind shear.
Storms are expected to clear by Friday morning.
