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Red flag warnings active across central US amid threat of 'extreme fire behavior'
Update: Fire warning affecting Iowa until Friday evening
An updated red flag warning was issued by the National Weather Service on Friday at 10:18 a.m. valid between noon and 6 p.m. The warning is for Quad Cities Area
What is a red flag warning? High to extreme fire danger in Iowa on Friday
While Iowans are enjoying a blip of warm weather to end February, high winds are causing much of the state to be under a red flag warning Friday.
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Hosted on MSNNOAA’s impact on daily life in eastern IowaHundreds of workers at the National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) lost their jobs this week as federal cuts continue.
Iowa is bracing for an extended cold snap that impacting much of the state. Wind chills should drop well below zero. Where will it be coldest?
In eastern Iowa, wind chills are expected to reach their coldest overnight Tuesday, with Iowa City predicted to drop to 28 below zero and Cedar Rapids descending to minus 30 degrees.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration houses key groups like the National Weather Service. Experts warn the consequences of employee cuts could be drastic.
The potential for flooding events in the region has decreased even more in the past two weeks, the National Weather Service’s Quad Cities Bureau says
KWWL is hearing from the latest round of federal workers that are now out of a job - employees at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Our furnaces are going to get a chance to slow down and going outside isn’t going to require multiple layers as we hit a warmup from the sub-zero temperatures and windchills this weekend. National Weather Service Meteorologist Dylan Dodson says the cold air that’s been sitting on the state is moving out.
Several more inches of snow are forecast today for parts of southern Iowa, though forecasters say the big weather story is the extreme cold that’ll settle in tonight. Meteorologist Rod Donavon, at the National Weather Service in metro Des Moines,
The National Weather Service offices in La Crosse, Des Moines, and Twin Cities will be holding storm spotter training sessions across southern Minnesota and northern Iowa in the spring. During
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