A sprawling winter storm is sweeping across large portions of the United States from Friday into early next week, delivering a dangerous mix of heavy snow, sleet, and freezing rain while ushering in exceptionally cold air that is expected to worsen road conditions and raise the risk of power outages.
Weather warnings now cover a broad swath of the country, with forecasters cautioning that the storm’s impacts will vary sharply by region—ranging from heavy, fast-falling snow in the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast to damaging ice farther south and in parts of the interior. The National Weather Service (NWS) said the combination of significant ice accumulations and gusty winds could produce “major to extreme” impacts in some areas, including travel that becomes “dangerous or impossible” and the potential for widespread outages.
North Texas: The Dallas–Fort Worth region is under a Winter Storm Warning through noon Sunday and an Extreme Cold Warning through Tuesday morning, with additional snow/sleet and ice accretion possible and wind chills expected to fall well below zero at times.
Mid-Atlantic/Northeast: In the New York City area, the NWS posted a Winter Storm Warning through Monday afternoon, calling for 8–12 inches of snow and sleet with the possibility of light icing and gusts around 35 mph—conditions that can rapidly deteriorate travel and reduce visibility.
Southeast ice risk: A separate NWS briefing for Georgia highlighted the potential for a major ice event, with Ice Storm Warnings noting 0.25–1 inch of ice in parts of north Georgia and gusts of 20–35 mph, a combination that can snap tree limbs and bring down power lines. The same briefing warned that very cold air behind the system could hinder melting and complicate emergency response, especially where outages occur.
The scope of disruption is already significant, with media reports citing widespread warnings and increasing concerns about outages and travel disruptions as the system progresses.
Safety guidance: Officials urge residents to avoid unnecessary travel, keep emergency supplies in vehicles, prepare for possible outages, and protect exposed pipes and pets from extreme cold. Where ice is forecast, even small accumulations can make roads treacherous and increase the likelihood of downed lines.
Note: An NWS PDF briefing was accessible in text form, but the PDF page-render “screenshot” function returned an error during retrieval; the report above relies on the document’s extracted text plus live NWS alert/forecast feeds.


















