Michigan, temperature
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A stretch of unseasonably cold nights will bring frost and possible freeze conditions to much of Michigan and neighboring Ohio through the weekend, putting early spring plants at risk and complicating lingering flooding concerns in parts of northern Lower and eastern Upper Michigan,
The entire Upper Peninsula and the northern Lower Peninsula remain under a flood watch. Flash flood and flood warnings and advisories have been issued near several dams, including the Cheboygan, Tippy and Mio, in the northern Lower Peninsula.
This academic year, school districts in the Upper Peninsula and northern Michigan experienced severe winter weather that forced many administrators to close far more often than expected. The superintendent of Johannesburg-Lewiston Area Schools in Otsego County,
Pattern Shift Brings Snow Flakes to Northern Michigan A major upper air flow change is underway across Michigan, with an upper level low forming over the Great Lakes region. This system will bring the possibility of snow flakes to northern Lower Michigan and the Upper Peninsula in the coming days.
Michigan's Upper Peninsula and the northern Lower Peninsula are bracing for an early-April winter storm. Bands of snow, sleet and freezing rain are forecast to develop Wednesday night, April 1, and last through Thursday, April 2. "Today will be dry, but ...
Flooding concerns persist across much of Northern Michigan today as dams near their overspill point are being tracked closely and road washouts continue to detour motorists. Last night’s heavy rain didn’t do those swamped areas any favors.
First it was flooding, now it’s freezing temperatures that poses a new threat. "Well, there is still flooding, but for the most part, things are slowly getting better," National Weather Service Meteorologist Jim Keysor said Sunday,
The 2025 ice storm was made so devastating because of a unique series of circumstances — including air temperature and pressure fronts — perfectly aligning. Here's how it happened:
Across Michigan, the growing intensity of blizzards and thunderstorms is putting pressure on infrastructure that wasn’t designed for today’s climate. A new crisis playbook aims to help pay for things that FEMA may not cover.