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maanantai 26. tammikuuta 2026

NOAA-HAARP-ICE Syndicate Distributes Free Calming Therapy to Everyone

.

  • Meanwhile, the discredited huckster Al Gore was interviewed at Davos and he blathered his usual climate change doom—to him things are perpetually warming, but Old Man Winter disagrees.
  • Stay frosty, America—both literally and figuratively!
    —The GrrrTeam


Right now; 16 strange weather radar images.
- See below the achievements of the new weather prophets.


Check below for a huge amount of useful Wikipedia information.


T=1769430418 / Human Date and time (GMT): Mon, 26th Jan. 2026, 12.26

___


Winter ICE Storm 2026

Cartoon published 01/24/2026

Americans are bracing for a chaotic blizzard of snow and freezing rain. Meanwhile, a determined ICE storm is sweeping in to deport a flurry of  illegal alien criminals.  

No ICE!” signs tumble like icicles. It’s a perfect mashup of Mother Nature’s deep freeze and the Department of Homeland Security’s deportation drive, reminding us that some storms are literal, and others are political tempests engineered by well-funded socialist radicals. They are harassing federal agents and impeding justice. Spoiler: It’s not organic outrage; it’s orchestrated chaos.

Crews are battling overnight to clear roads, but with temperatures plummeting. In cartoon terms, this storm is the perfect backdrop for ICE’s “deportation blizzard,” where the cold isn’t just meteorological—it’s the chill of accountability hitting those who’ve overstayed their welcome. While the winter storm rages, ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) is unleashing its own storm under President Trump’s second term. Dubbed the “largest mass deportation program in history,” operations have ramped up dramatically since January 2025, with arrests surging 76% in Missouri and nearly tripling in Kansas. DHS reports removing over 670,000 illegal aliens in the first year, including serious criminals like murderers and pedophiles, setting the stage for even more in 2026. 

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Recent raids in Maine, Minneapolis, and Kansas City have netted hundreds, with agents entering homes without judicial warrants per a controversial 2025 memo—sparking outcry but delivering results. Trump’s no-nonsense approach, including Arctic specialist troops aiding 3,000 agents in places like Minnesota amid sub-zero protests, is moving the needle on border security. But here’s the twist: As ICE clears the “storm,” leftist agitators are throwing snowballs—literally and figuratively—at the agents.  

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Despite winter’s fury, thousands braved freezing temps for “ICE Out!” rallies in Minneapolis on Jan 23, 2026—over 4,000 in NYC’s Union Square and 1,000+ in Orange County, walking out in protest of deportations. These aren’t casual gatherings; protesters have impeded operations, harassed agents, and even clashed in sub-zero conditions, chanting against federal enforcement while businesses shut down in solidarity. Reports detail agitators blocking ICE vehicles, shouting down officers, and creating standoffs that delay deportations—turning routine ops into frozen battlegrounds.

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GOP lawmakers are pressing investigations into taxpayer dollars flowing to these outfits via state grants (e.g., Minnesota’s Million Voter Project, which got $400K+ from public safety funds and supports anti-ICE actions). Broader allegations point to billionaire George Soros’ Open Society Foundations, which have poured millions into immigration advocacy groups opposing deportations—though fact-checks call direct “paid rioter” links unproven, conservative reports insist the money trail enables organized chaos. Even ACLU and NILC critiques focus on ICE’s ballooning budget ($10B base + $75B supplement), but the real question is: Why are these “protests” so slickly funded while agents freeze in the line of duty? 

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CONTINUES

SOURCE:
https://grrrgraphics.com/winter-ice-storm-2026/



___


Posted By: Mr.Ed [Send E-Mail]
Date: Saturday, 24-Jan-2026 20:49:18
www.rumormill.news/264354

In Response To: Somebody Please Explain This ??? (Current Radar Screenshots) (Mr.Ed)


I have known about HAARP for over 30 years...but I never seen this radar anomaly before...so this may be something new they have added to the mix.

I viewed recently a video on cell towers and this guy works on them. (or did)

He stood under a cell tower and looked up and pointed out 2 different type/shape boxes / devices up on the tower.

The smaller square looking units had a green light on at the bottom so you could clearly see from the ground they are working and turned on. There were maybe a dozen of them in all directions.

He said those green lit up boxes are not for your cell phone. They are for human mind control. 😮

Then he pointed out the larger rectangular shaped boxes / units not on (no green lights) and he said those are not for your cell phone either...they are for weather control.

So there you have it. They are not cell phone towers at all.

Well maybe some of them are...mixed in...but you never noticed the difference until I just pointed it out. They try to keep us in the dark...but we need to know.

I will try to find that video and post it so you can share...but I told you the story...and you can take that to the bank.

I can also tell you for sure the towers with weather control are using microwave energy to do it. So they are cooking us with giant microwave ovens in the sky.

I can also tell you for sure the devices doing this strange anomaly we see today in these screenshots are ground based.

Whatever it is...the cabal has everything cranked up on full blast and maybe they added something more this time for this fake false flag winter weather weapon using HAARP and Microwave Towers and other dark technologies?

I read intel telling the MSM are not reporting the severity of this storm so the sheeple are not ready to cause max damage & death.

I seen reports of 12" of snow and 2" of ice to take the grid down...and kill millions in cities with no power.

The cabal bad guys are losing so they are throwing everything they got at us now.

This is no act of nature...no accident. It is full out weather wars attack hitting 40 states at once.

They are reporting Thunder Sleet and Thunder Snow.

New terms for new technology?

Mr.Ed :)

_________________________________

________________________________

What the actual fuck are these photos?

This shot (below) shows a Microwave tower in Charleston 'turned on' to enhance the storm and intensify it. The straight lines on radar are the signature for the weather control cell towers. I think NOAA has control over them. They were the ones seeding clouds for hurricane Helene that historically left the ocean for the mountains...never before in history. 🤔



SOURCE:
https://www.rumormillnews.com/cgi-bin/forum.cgi?read=264354


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National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration


(NOAA /ˈn.ə/ NOH-ə) is a United States scientific and regulatory

agency tasked with forecasting weather, monitoring oceanic and atmospheric conditions, charting the seas, conducting deep-sea exploration, and managing fishing and protection of marine mammals and endangered species in the US exclusive economic zone. The agency is part of the United States Department of Commerce and is headquartered in Silver Spring, Maryland.

History

Founding

NOAA traces its history back to multiple agencies,[8] some of which are among the earliest in the federal government:[9]


20th century

The most direct predecessor of NOAA was the Environmental Science Services Administration (ESSA), into which several existing scientific agencies such as the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey, the Weather Bureau, and the uniformed Corps were absorbed in 1965.[9]

NOAA was established within the Department of Commerce via the Reorganization Plan No. 4,[9] and formed on October 3, 1970, after U.S. President Richard Nixon proposed creating a new agency to serve a national need for "better protection of life and property from natural hazards... for a better understanding of the total environment... [and] for exploration and development leading to the intelligent use of our marine resources".[10]

NOAA is a part of the Department of Commerce rather than the Department of Interior, because of a feud between President Nixon and his interior secretary, Wally Hickel, over the Nixon Administration's Vietnam War policy. Nixon did not like Hickel's letter urging Nixon to listen to the Vietnam War demonstrators,[11] and punished Hickel by not putting NOAA in the Interior Department.[12]

21st century 

In 2007, NOAA celebrated 200 years of service in its role as successor to the U.S. Survey of the Coast.[13]

In 2021, NOAA had 11,833 civilian employees.[6] Its research and operations are further supported by 321 uniformed service members, who made up the NOAA Commissioned Corps.[14]

In 2024, Project 2025 proposed to get rid of the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research, which would "dismantle" NOAA's research division.[15][16]

NOAA has experienced numerous changes under the second presidency of Donald Trump. On February 27, 2025, several hundred NOAA staffers, mainly probationary, were laid off after staffers from the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) entered the headquarters of NOAA.[17] By early March, 1,300 NOAA staff members (roughly 10% of the total workforce) were laid off.[18]

In June, 2025, the Department of Defense announced it would no longer provide critical weather data to scientists and forecasters, including to NOAA staff.[19]

CONTINUES
SOURCE:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Oceanic_and_Atmospheric_Administration

___ 

January 2026 North American winter storm


January 2026 North American winter storm
The storm system responsible for the event, pictured over the United States and northern Mexico on Jan. 24, 2026 at around 10:30 a.m. CST (UTC-6)
Meteorological history
FormedJanuary 22, 2026
Winter storm
Lowest pressure1005 mbar (hPa); 29.68 inHg
Maximum snowfall or ice accretionSnow – 24.9 in (63 cm) near Sweden Township, Pennsylvania
Ice – 0.75 in (19 mm) in Hall Summit, Louisiana
Sleet – 3.5 inches (8.9 cm) in Sadler, Texas
Overall effects
Fatalities12
Injuries18+
DamageUnknown
Areas affectedFour CornersOhio ValleySouthernMidwestern and Eastern United States (Mid-Atlantic states), New EnglandCentral CanadaAtlantic CanadaNorthern Mexico[1][2]
Power outages> 1,000,000

Part of the 2025–26 North American winter


The January 2026 North American winter storm is an ongoing major winter storm affecting much of North America across regions stretching from Northern Mexico and Southern to Northeastern United States and Canada. The storm is over 2,000 mi (3,200 km) in length.[3][4] Developing in part from an upper-level low on January 22, the system steadily moved eastwards across the Central United States, dropping a very large swath of wintry precipitation. By January 25, the winter storm had moved into the Northeast, where it began to transition into a nor'easter. The storm was unofficially named Winter Storm Fern by the Weather Channel.[5]

Twenty-four U.S. state governors have issued emergency declarations in response.[6][7] As of January 25, approximately 12 fatalities had been confirmed due to the storm, including 2 people who died from hypothermia in Caddo Parish, near Shreveport, Louisiana. Over a million customers have been confirmed to have lost power simultaneously, the majority in the Deep South region of the United States.[8] 

Meteorological history

Beginning in mid-January 2026,[vague] meteorologists began forecasting that a large-scale winter storm would impact a vast portion of the continental United States.[5] The storm originated from the effect of a wave in the upper atmosphere having elongated the polar vortex, which is normally over northern Canada and Alaska. The cold air from this effect had been forecast to interact with the moisture from off of the coast of California and the Gulf of Mexico to create the expected ice and snow for large parts of North America, most especially the United States.[9] The storm first developed on January 22 in the Pacific Ocean as a cold-core low moving southeastwards towards the Baja California peninsula. Due to the immense size and expected impact of the winter storm, a NOAA Gulfstream IV-SP flew into the system to collect data in order to improve forecasting accuracy.[10][11] The system developed over the Great Plains midday January 23,[12] as a broad trough coalesced over the Plains and Rockies.[13] Wintry precipitation in association with this developing system began to progress to the east, although it was primarily sleet and freezing rain, spreading into northern Texas, southern regions of Oklahoma, and southern Arkansas.[14][15] Later that night, a shift in precipitation type over to snow began over central and eastern Oklahoma, and far-western Arkansas, with an increase in moisture expected to lead to snowfall rates of up to 1 inch (2.5 cm) an hour.[16] The snow started to fall in central Arkansas during the first hours of January 24.[17]

By 15:00 UTC on January 24, the Weather Prediction Center (WPC) began issuing storm summary bulletins on the system, as a low pressure wave had settled along a cold front near the Gulf Coast, met by a barometric ridge over the Plains.[18] Several tornado warnings and watches were issued in AlabamaGeorgia, and Florida, with gusts of 71 mph (114 km/h) reported in Montgomery, Alabama.[19]


Preparations

United States

Active weather alerts in the United States as of 7:30 p.m. EST (UTC-5) on January 24.

More than 20 U.S state governors have issued emergency declarations in anticipation.[6][20] A large swath of winter weather alerts were issued by the NWS, including winter storm warnings and ice storm warnings stretching from the Four Corners region to as far northeast as the state of Maine, comprising a near 2,000-mile (3,200 km) stretch of alerts and including more than 230 million people.[20]

The number of counties under a winter storm warning was the highest recorded.[12][when?] Over 560 flights in the United States were cancelled by 4:40 pm. EST on January 23, almost 4,000 on January 24, and over 9,000 on January 25.[21][22] Dozens of Amtrak trains were cancelled,[23] and several sporting events were postponed.[24]

Southwest 

A state of emergency was declared by New Mexico governor Michelle Lujan Grisham and allocated $200,000 to support communities in New Mexico.[25]

South 

Texas governor Greg Abbott declared a state of emergency on January 21, mobilizing the state's Division of Emergency Management (TDEM) to activate response resources.[26] The Texas Rangers cancelled a Fan Fest event that was set to take place on January 24.[27]

Empty shelves at a grocery store in Corpus Christi, Texas, in advance of the storm.

Governor Kay Ivey declared a state of emergency for 19 counties in northern Alabama.[28]

On January 22, Arkansas governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders declared a state of emergency and the Arkansas Division of Emergency Management was authorized $250,000 from the Disaster Response and Recovery Fund of Arkansas.[29]

Georgia governor Brian Kemp also declared a state of emergency and mobilized 500 National Guardsmen.[30]

Louisiana governor Jeff Landry declared a state of emergency on January 18 and the Governor's Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness activated its Crisis Actions Team.[31] Residents were noted to have bought firewood in order to stay warm during the storm and its aftermath.[32] The Louisiana Department of Transportation (LDOTD) said that crews were stocked on deicing solutions and that they would have crews pre-treating roads beginning in shifts on January 23.[33] Entergy stated that they would monitor the power situation and respond "as soon as it is safe to do so".[34]

A state of emergency was declared by Mississippi governor Tate Reeves beginning on January 23.[35][36]

Kristi Noem meets managers of the Federal Emergency Management Agency and U.S. Coast Guard on Jan. 21, 2026, ahead of the winter storm.

Mid-Atlantic

A state of preparedness was issued by Governor Patrick Morrisey for West Virginia on January 21.[37] A state of emergency was issued by Virginia governor Abigail Spanberger on January 22.[27] Maryland governor Wes Moore declared a state of preparedness.[38] The University of Maryland allowed for move-ins for the second semester as early as January 23 due to the inclement weather.[39][40]

A state of emergency was declared for New York by Governor Kathy Hochul on January 23. Early voting for special elections in New York City were cancelled for January 25.[41] States of emergencies were also declared by Maryland governor Wes Moore,[42] New Jersey governor Mikie Sherrill,[43] Pennsylvania governor Josh Shapiro,[44] Delaware governor Matt Meyer,[45] West Virginia governor Patrick Morrisey,[46] and Washington, D.C. mayor Muriel Bowser.[47]

LaGuardia Airport closed at 1:00 pm on January 25 during the storm while NJ Transit and NYC Ferry also suspended service.[48] All state parks in New Jersey were closed on January 24 at 5:00 pm.[49]

Midwest 

Indiana governor Mike Braun declared a state of emergency and a statewide disaster declaration on January 24.[50] The declaration came after heavy snow accumulation, with some reports indicating 1–4 inches (2.5–10.2 cm) of snowfall accumulation on the evening of January 24.[51] The declaration was also issued in anticipation of forecasts released earlier on January 24 projecting 12–18 inches (30–46 cm) of snowfall accumulation in the state from January 24 to January 25, primarily in the southern portions of the state.[52]

Missouri governor Mike Kehoe issued a state of emergency and activated the state's National Guard as well as its Emergency Operations Center.[53] Kansas governor Laura Kelly declared a state of disaster emergency on the morning of January 23.[54] Ohio governor Mike DeWine declared a state of emergency on January 24 and suspended normal state purchasing requirements to procure necessary resources.[55]

In Iowa, cold temperatures required schools to be cancelled on January 23 and delayed on January 26.[56][57][58]

Ohio Valley 

Tennessee governor Bill Lee declared a state of emergency for the entirety of Tennessee on January 22.[59] A Memphis Grizzlies game against the Denver Nuggets was postponed.[8] The Ohio Department of Transportation mobilized 1,500 snowplows.[60] Kentucky governor Andy Beshear declared a state of emergency on January 23.[61] Judge-Executive Tim Hutchins declared a state of emergency for Nelson County, Kentucky.[62]

New England 

Connecticut governor Ned Lamont declared a state of emergency on the night of January 24 and scheduled it to take effect on January 25 at noon.[63] Tweed New Haven Airport was shut down during the storm.[64]

Canada

Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) issued an orange-level winter storm warning on January 24 for the Greater Toronto Area in anticipation of 20–40 centimetres (7.9–15.7 in) of snowfall accumulation.[65] In the Maritimes, Environment and Climate Change Canada issued yellow winter storm warnings for southern Nova Scotia while yellow snowfall warnings were issued for the rest of Nova Scotia and for the southern half of New Brunswick on January 25. A special weather statement was also in effect for Prince Edward Island.[66]

Mexico 

The National Meteorological Service issued a winter weather alert for Northern Mexico on January 23.[67]

Impact

United States 

By the afternoon of January 24, over 135,000 people lost power.[68] Almost 700,000 were without power by the morning of January 25.[69] By mid-day, that number was over 1 million, primarily in Texas, Louisiana, the Mississippi Delta, and the southern Ohio River basin.[70] Meteorologists from the National Weather Service estimated that there were around 300 million people under winter precipitation and/or cold warnings or advisories.[71] January 25 was set to go down as one of the days with the most weather-related flight cancellations in US history, with more than 10,000 cancellations by mid-day, and more than 15,000 possible the following day.[72]

pedestrian wearing snowshoes crosses First Avenue in Midtown Manhattan.

Southwest

Many roadways in Texas were closed due to icy conditions.[73] Two 18-wheel trucks got stuck on a ramp on Interstate 40, requiring them to be towed.[74] One person died in Austin, after being exposed to the cold.[75]

Little Rock, Arkansas, received 6 in (15 cm) of snow and broke a daily snowfall record set in 1899.[76]

Kansas City International Airport set a daily record with 5.2 in (13 cm) on January 24, breaking the previous record set in 1956.[77]

Oklahoma City recorded 4.4 in (11 cm) of snow on January 24, which broke the previous daily snowfall record set in 1948.[78]


South

Ice buildup on the roads in Madison Parish, Louisiana.

Severe thunderstorm warnings, alongside a tornado watch were issued for parts of Florida, Georgia, and Alabama through the evening on January 25, with multiple tornado warnings being issued later on.[70][79][80] A wind gust of 71 mph (114 km/h) was recorded in Montgomery, Alabama.[8]

A driver died in a single-vehicle crash in Dyersburg, Tennessee.[81] 18 others were injured in more than 160 other weather-related crashes across Tennessee.[82] As much as 300,000 people were estimated to have lost power as a result of damaging ice accumulations.[83] Numerous other accidents were reported and officials stated that residents should stay off the roads unless absolutely necessary.[83]

Two fatalities occurred due to hypothermia in Caddo Parish, Louisiana.[84]

Over 1,000 flights were cancelled at Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport in Atlanta, Georgia.[85]

Over 400 traffic accidents were reported in North Carolina during the storm, with portions of Interstate 26 and Interstate 85 closing.[86]


Midwest

Aftermath of the storm in Bloomington, Indiana

Burchard, Nebraska, received 2.8 inches (7.1 cm) of snow.[87]

In Iowa, a 17-year-old teenager died and two adults aged 24 and 25 were injured in Jefferson County after winter weather conditions caused the teenager to lose control of her car.[88]

By the morning of January 25, states such as IndianaIllinoisMissouri , and Ohio saw snow accumulation of up to 14 inches (36 cm).[51]

During the frigid conditions leading up to the storm, a 19-year-old college student was found dead in Ann Arbor, Michigan, after going missing without a coat in frigid conditions.[89] Elsewhere in MichiganGrand Rapids recorded a low temperature of −19 °F (−28 °C) on the morning of January 24, which was the coldest temperature recorded in the area since 1994.[90][91] That same morning, Flint recorded a low temperature of −24 °F (−31 °C), just one degree above the all time record low for the area.[92]

ColumbusOhio set a new daily snowfall record on January 25, recording 11.6 inches (29 cm). The previous daily record of 4.7 inches (12 cm) was set in 1988.[93]


Northeast and Mid-Atlantic

Snow at 1:41pm on January 25th on Crooke Ave, Brooklyn

As of the evening of January 25, Central Park reported 10.6 in (27 cm) of snow.[94] On January 25, there were five fatalities reported in New York City with causes as yet undisclosed.[95][68] Public libraries in the city were said to remain closed on January 26.[83] The Citi Bike service shut down on January 26 in New York due to the hazardous weather.[83]

By 6:00 am, 177 car crashes were reported during the storm in Virginia, resulting in multiple injuries. One person was also killed in a collision, but weather was reportedly not a factor.[96]

An avalanche was recorded in Duryea, Pennsylvania, due to the snowstorm.[97]

Bombardier Challenger 650 carrying eight people crashed at Bangor International Airport near Bangor, Maine, during winter weather conditions caused by the snowstorm. The cause is currently unknown.[98]


Canada 

Snow began in southern Ontario on January 25. Over 560 flights were cancelled by 3:00 pm at the Toronto Pearson International Airport. 33 flights were cancelled at the Toronto Billy Bishop Airport. A potent lake-enhanced snow band stalled over much of Toronto for several hours, prompting the City of Toronto to activate its major snow response plan for the second time in 2026 just prior to 5 pm. The Ontario Provincial Police responded to around 100 car crashes over 24 hours.[99] By 5:30 pm, roughly 50 centimetres (20 in) fell in parts of the core of Toronto.[100] Toronto Pearson International Airport reported its largest single-day snowfall since records began in 1937, receiving a total of 46 cm (18 in).[101]

[...]

References

  1.  Corp, Pelmorex (2026-01-23). "Major U.S. winter storm to reach Atlantic Canada Sunday"The Weather Network. Retrieved 2026-01-23.
  2.  The Weather Network (2026-01-22). Massive Winter Storm Threatens Millions in Canada and U.S. | #forecast. Retrieved 2026-01-23 – via YouTube.
  3.  Erdman, Jonathan (January 24, 2026). "How Winter Storm Fern Could Be Historic"The Weather Channel. Retrieved 24 January 2026.
  4.  Zerkel, Eric (2026-01-23). "January 23, 2026 — Winter storm begins, bringing ice, heavy snow to much of the US"CNN. Retrieved 2026-01-25.
  5.  Ghaffar, Nazaneen; McCann, Erin (January 21, 2026). "Everything You Could Possibly Want to Know About This Winter Storm"The New York Times. Retrieved 23 January 2026Meteorological agencies in some parts of the world assign names to winter storms, but in the United States, only hurricanes and tropical storms get official names from the National Weather Service. Since 2012, The Weather Channel has used its own list of names for storms, a move that has been criticized as a marketing ploy. It is calling this one Fern.
  6.  Corp, Pelmorex (2026-01-22). "Eyeing a significant U.S. storm and its impact in Atlantic Canada"The Weather Network. Retrieved 2026-01-22.
  7.  "Winter Storm Shifting Track Targets 230 Million With Ice, Snow | Weather.com"weather.com. 2026-01-22. Retrieved 2026-01-22.
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  9.  "Meteorologists blame a stretched polar vortex, moisture, lack of sea ice for dangerous winter blast"AP News. 2026-01-21. Retrieved 2026-01-25.
  10.  Fitzpatrick, Alex (2026-01-22). "Inside NWS' effort to forecast this week's potentially historic winter storm"Axios. Retrieved 2026-01-22.
  11.  Martin, Julie (January 22, 2026). "NOAA's Hurricane Hunters tackle winter storm"11Alive. Retrieved 24 January 2026.
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  13.  "WPC surface analysis valid for 01/23/2026 at 12 UTC"www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov. Weather Prediction Center. Retrieved 25 January 2026.
  14.  "Storm Prediction Center Mesoscale Discussion 34"www.spc.noaa.gov. Storm Prediction Center. Retrieved 25 January 2026.
  15.  "Storm Prediction Center Mesoscale Discussion 35"www.spc.noaa.gov. Storm Prediction Center.
  16.  "Storm Prediction Center Mesoscale Discussion 37"www.spc.noaa.gov. Storm Prediction Center.
  17.  "Storm Prediction Center Mesoscale Discussion 39"www.spc.noaa.gov. Storm Prediction Center.
  18.  Wilder (January 24, 2026). "Storm Summary Number 1 for Major January Winter Storm". Weather Prediction Center. Retrieved January 24, 2026.
  19.  Straker, Renee (2026-01-25). "LIVE UPDATES: Winter Storm Fern Turns Deadly | Weather.com"weather.com. Retrieved 2026-01-25.
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  21.  Chen, Eve; Wichter, Zach (January 23, 2026). "Airlines cancel flights, offer waivers as storm nears. Be proactive"USA Today. Retrieved January 23, 2026.
  22.  Ste, Phil (2026-01-24). "U.S. winter storm leads to more than 100,000 power outages, thousands of flight cancellations"Reuters. Retrieved 2026-01-24.
  23.  "Amtrak adds Floridian, Heartland Flyer to list of cancellations (updated)"Trains. 2026-01-22. Retrieved 2026-01-24.
  24.  Writer, JOHN RABY-AP Sports (January 23, 2026). "NBA, ACC men, UConn women among college hoops games affected by approaching winter storm"Ashe Post & Times.
  25.  Thomason, Cody (January 24, 2026). "Governor declares state of emergency in New Mexico due to winter storm"KOAT 7. Retrieved January 24, 2026.
  26.  "Governor Abbott activates state of emergency as most of Texas braces for severe winter weather"ABC13 Houston. January 21, 2026. Archived from the original on January 22, 2026. Retrieved January 22, 2026.
  27.  "How to prepare for the winter storm set to hit half the U.S. this weekend"NBC News. January 21, 2026.
  28.  Lang, Taylor; West, Jordan (January 22, 2026). "Gov. Kay Ivey issues 'State of Emergency' for 19 counties in northern Alabama"WVTM13. Retrieved January 22, 2026.
  29.  "Gov. Sanders declares state of emergency ahead of winter storm"K8. January 22, 2026. Retrieved January 22, 2026.
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CONTINUES:

SOURCE:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/January_2026_North_American_winter_storm?ysclid=mkv81qucti37720719


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