The winter storm that crossed the Gulf coast and landed in Florida earlier this week is one for the record books, smashing the previous all-time high for snowfall in the Sunshine State.
The all-time greatest snowfall in the Sunshine State was 4″ in Milton, outside of ... Most school districts between Jacksonville and Pensacola canceled classes on Wednesday, including major universities such as Florida State University, FAMU, the ...
Even less sleet fell in the Jacksonville area and that has already melted. Here's the latest on what the storm brought to the Panhandle and North Florida Tuesday ... from Pensacola Bay stretching north. The Milton and Jay areas got 8 to 9.5 inches of ...
The winter storm that moved through Florida on Tuesday into Wednesday is one for the record books, smashing the previous all-time high for snowfall in the Sunshine State.
Millions of people across the Southeast — particularly older adults living with low incomes — have faced immense challenges as they rebuild.'
The National Weather Service just dropped updated snowfall totals, with Milton now up to 9.8 inches. This will be the final total and, if verified, may stand as the new Florida state record for snowfall. A previous record was 4 inches, also set in Milton in 1954.
A historic winter storm that prompted rare Winter Storm Warnings across North Florida and the Panhandle ... to the National Weather Service. Nearby Milton, though, had an official total of 8.8 ...
Storm Warning is in effect for the entire Interstate 10 corridor where snow and ice accumulations could reach 4" over the next 24 hours. Pensacola will likely see the most snowfall in the state while greater amounts of ice are anticipated for cities such as Tallahassee and Jacksonville.
Even less sleet fell in the Jacksonville area and that has already melted. Here's the latest on what the storm brought to the Panhandle and North Florida ... The Milton and Jay areas got 8 to ...
Anna Maria Island -- located midway between Sarasota and Tampa, but a world apart from either – continues to recover from back-to-back hurricanes.
Interest-free loans up to $500K are now available for farmers and ranchers who saw damage during freak cold snap.
Not even the most seasoned Floridians anticipated the magnitude of the epic snowstorm that shattered Florida’s snow records last week.