Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond filed two lawsuits in Osage County District Court, about Uri utility rates. This month, he filed a third
In his third related lawsuit, Attorney General Gentner Drummond claims more companies unlawfully increased prices during the freezing temperatures.
A sprawling winter storm that is pushing slowly across the United States will bring a risk of severe weather and excessive rainfall to a large part of the south-central United States from Wednesday into Friday. Isolated thunderstorms, flooding rains and damaging winds are all possible in an area between East Texas and western Kentucky.
The agency forecasts snow accumulations of 12 to 18 inches during this time for areas above 6,000 feet, while areas over 4,000 feet should expect 3 to 6 inches. On Saturday, wind gusts could reach 50 miles per hour in speed, with travel becoming "very difficult to impossible."
A major winter storm slammed the US Gulf Coast Tuesday, blanketing parts of a region largely unaccustomed to extreme winter weather with record-breaking snowfall.
Many Oklahomans most likely saw cars stuck on the road during last week’s winter weather. One woman in Noble said when she had to leave her car, someone broke into it, saying that when she saw what happened she was filled with disappointment. The truck’s passenger window is fixed now, but the owner said it was broken into during the winter storm.
After a record-breaking Gulf Coast storm, cities like New Orleans and Pensacola, Florida, have had more snow this winter than Omaha, Des Moines and New York.
Dangerous cold temperatures remained across Oklahoma, with the lowest temperatures in nearly four years hitting the state.
After a freak winter storm crossed the Gulf Coast this week, some typically warm locations saw more snow than Oklahoma did.
Around 40 million people in the U.S. are under a winter storm warning from an unusual blast of severe cold weather and snow across the South.
The FOX Forecast Center is closely monitoring the development of the nation’s next significant storm system, which could produce feet of snow across portions of the Southwest and Plains, while severe weather could rock parts of the Southeast and Gulf Coast that were recently slammed by a historic blizzard.
KOCO Chief Meteorologist Damon Lane says scattered showers are possible across the state on Wednesday, but heavy rain will move in overnight into Thursday morning. Nearly all of Oklahoma could see a chance for soaking rain. The threat for rain will likely move out by noon Thursday.