CLARKSBURG, W.Va. (WBOY) – Every school district in West Virginia was closed or had remote learning again Tuesday after the state was dumped with its first major, statewide snowstorm of the season on Monday, but just how much accumulation did cities across the state get?
Temperatures are expected to heat up a bit on Saturday, and some of the piling-up snow West Virginia has gotten over the past few weeks might melt. However, there is a chance of even more snow and extreme cold next week starting on Sunday.
West Virginia’s Northern Panhandle counties are under a Winter Weather Advisory and Hazardous Weather Outlook. Eastern Panhandle counties could get 5-9 inches of snow with one-tenth of an inch of ice.
The National Weather Service had multiple states under winter weather advisories or winter storm warnings early on Friday.
MORGANTOWN, W. Va. (KDKA) — All 55 West Virginia counties are under a state of emergency for the winter storm sweeping across the country. Morgantown, West Virginia, is expecting more than 9 inches of snow, making it one of the hardest hit areas around ...
CHARLESTON —  After working around the clock to treat and clear the state’s highway system in the midst of a winter storm last week, the West Virginia Division of Highways (WVDOH) is aggressively patching potholes that formed as a result of the freeze-thaw cycles.
One of the regions hit the hardest in Monday’s storm was south of Pittsburgh in Morgantown, West Virginia, where the area was expecting more than nine inches of snow. They were getting the most they’d seen in a long time,
West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice has declared a state of emergency for all 55 West Virginia counties due to a winter storm that hit the state, leaving roads icy and thousands without electricity.
Following last week's winter storm, the West Virginia Division of Highways is now patching potholes that formed as a result of the freeze-thaw cycles.
Information from American Electric Power indicates Cold load pickup continued challenging Appalachian Power crews as they work to restore power on January 9.
The West Virginia Division of Highways announced Wednesday that after working around the clock to treat and clear the state’s highway system in the midst of a winter storm last week, they are now “aggressively patching potholes” that formed because of the recent “freeze-thaw cycles.