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Short Range Public Discussion
 
(Latest Discussion - Issued 0716Z Jan 08, 2026)
 
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Short Range Forecast Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 215 AM EST Thu Jan 08 2026 Valid 12Z Thu Jan 08 2026 - 12Z Sat Jan 10 2026 ...Impactful snow for southeastern Colorado into New Mexico Thursday night into Friday. Chances for impactful snow for Upper Midwest into Great Lakes Friday night into Saturday... ...Flash flooding and severe weather threat across the Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys Friday... ...Record warmth for much of the Southeast to Ohio Valley Thursday into Friday... The cold front that has moved into the Central Great Basin and Central Rockies from the Pacific Northwest will continue to move southeastward, bringing chances for some mixed precipitation over the Four Corners and portions of the Interior West today. With sufficient moisture, upslope flow, and cold surface temperatures, chances for moderate to locally heavy snowfall will increase, especially over parts of southeastern Colorado and New Mexico. With the chances for heavy snow and gusty winds, travel conditions will be hazardous. Several areas within the Four Corners have issued Winter Weather Advisories and Winter Storm Warnings through Friday. As the cold front pushes northeastward into the Upper Midwest and Great Lakes by Friday, chances for heavy snow increases as another wave drops southward from Canada. Chances for unsettled weather and widespread precipitation continues through Friday, as the surface low and the associated frontal system moves eastward across the Central/Southern Plains into the Ohio and Tennessee Valley. As the southwesterly flow continues to pull sufficient moisture from the Gulf, chances for heavier rainfall and flash flooding will increase as the system progresses east. The Weather Prediction Center has issued a Slight risk (level 2/4) for Excessive Rainfall for portions of the Tennessee Valley and Deep South for Friday. In addition, the Storm Prediction Center has issued a Marginal Risk (level 1/5) for severe thunderstorms over Oklahoma into parts of the Lower/Mid Mississippi Valley for Thursday and a Slight Risk (level 2/5) for the lower Mississippi Valley into parts of the Mid-South and Southeast. With the upper-level ridge continuing to move from Central U.S. to Eastern U.S. and the southerly flow transporting warmer air northward, the warming trend will continue over the next few days. Temperatures will reach above normal temperatures of 20-35 degrees across parts of the Plains, Midwest, Ohio Valley, and portions of the Northeast. Temperatures are expected to reach between 70s and 80s Thursday through Friday across the Southern Plains into Southeast and parts of the Mid-Atlantic, which may break daily records. Otherwise, much of Western U.S. will see a cooling trend as a cold front moves eastward into the Plains. Temperatures will drop into the 30s to 50s, which will be 5-15 degrees below normal. Heading into the weekend, temperatures began to return to near normal seasonal temperatures across CONUS. Oudit Graphics available at https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/basicwx/basicwx_ndfd.php