How cold will it get? Will you actually get frostbite if you go outside? What if your power goes out? You have questions. We have answers.
What will the weather be like on Martin Luther King Jr. Day and President-elect Donald Trump's Inauguration? Check Monday's forecast here.
According to the NWS, Cincinnati is expected to receive approximately 3 inches of snow Friday through Saturday. However, the city could get as much as 5 inches on the high-end.
Cold, dry weather is forecast for the Ohio Valley Region on Wednesday, but another chance of snow will return early on Thursday.
The Sunday snowfall total was updated in this report as the National Weather Service corrected its tally. Here are the latest updates as Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky are slammed by a ...
A deep freeze sets in this week as Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky remain blanketed in snow. Schools close for a second day, roads, other updates.
The region is bracing for more snow and bitterly cold temperatures on Monday after seeing 5-plus inches of snow Monday. Start the day smarter. Get all the news you need in your in
Organizations in Hamilton County are issuing updates Saturday after a winter weather advisory for the region was lifted at 7 a.m.
Sunday: Partly sunny, with a high near 34 degrees. South wind 6 to 10 mph. A slight chance of drizzle and snow between 1 and 3 a.m., then a slight chance of drizzle, snow, and freezing rain after 3 a.m. Mostly cloudy in the evening, with a low around 25. Southwest wind around 9 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%.
The threat of wind chills as low as 5 to 15 degrees below zero is expected to limit reconstruction operations to daytime hours.
Precipitation may end with a little light snow on Saturday evening before dry, very cold conditions return to Greater Cincinnati on Sunday into early next week. Dangerous wind chills are forecast for Monday through Wednesday. Wind chills may drop 10 degrees below zero and some areas may get to 20 below zero.
A legend to those who lived through it, the blizzard of 1978 has a definitive place in Cincinnati lore. It happened 46 years ago this January as the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes were paralyzed by one of the worst winter storms in the region. Bitter cold temperatures and howling winds pushed into the Cincinnati area Jan. 26, 1978.