Snow or a wintry mix is on the the way to much of North Carolina starting Friday. It will make for hazardous driving conditions through the start of the weekend.
We're watching a developing winter storm in Texas on Thursday. It will track along the Gulf Coast on Friday to off our coast by Saturday morning.
That track will bring snow to western North Carolina as early as midday.
With the recent cold weather, the snow will begin to stick to the ground, including roads, quickly. That will make for a difficult Friday evening commute in the western half of the state, including Charlotte and the Triad.
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools will have a remote learning day Friday, and Wake County schools will be dismissed three hours early, officials for both school districts said.
The snow will spread across the eastern half of the state through Friday evening. Locations close to the southern coast, including Wilmington, should initially see more of a snow, sleet and rain mix.
Warmer air will move inland from the coast through Friday night. That will cause more areas, especially from the Sandhills and along the Interstate 95 corridor to near the Triangle and Charlotte, to see the snow become a mix of sleet and freezing rain. The southern coast will see a changeover to mostly rain.
Areas that see more of the wintry mix will likely get up to an inch of snow and sleet, and then an icy glazing of up to 0.1 inch from freezing rain. Some areas from east of Charlotte to west of Fayetteville may receive somewhat higher ice accumulation amounts.
North of a line from Charlotte to Raleigh should see more snow, with sleet mixing in at times. This is expected to result in snow accumulations of 1 to 3 inches.
As is typical with winter systems, parts of the mountains of western North Carolina could see higher totals, 2 to 5 inches in some areas.
These snow and ice accumulation amounts will not be enough to cause widespread power outages. However, it's always a good idea to be prepared for an isolated outage.
Stay tuned to Weather on the 1s on Spectrum News 1 for updates.
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