Severe Outlooks By State

Here are the Severe Outlooks from the SPC by statistically significant states:

Alabama – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Arizona – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Arkansas – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Northern California – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Southern California – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Colorado – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Florida – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Georgia – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Illinois – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Indiana – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Iowa – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Kansas – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Kentucky – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Louisiana – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Maryland – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Minnesota – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Mississippi – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Missouri – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Nebraska – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
North Carolina – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
North Dakota – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Ohio – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Oklahoma – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
South Carolina – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
South Dakota – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Tennessee – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
East Texas – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
West Texas – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Virginia – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
West Virginia – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook
Wisconsin – Day 1 Severe Outlook || Day 2 Severe Outlook

One thought on “Severe Outlooks By State

  1. I’m reaching out to your organization about Washington States forecast for severe eather last week. There were warnings of tornadoes and 1-2″ hailstone showers up and down WA’s west coast. It was a big deal. People were covering their cars to protect against huge hailstones, and preparing for possible tornadoes, plural, normally extremely rare here. Only, none of it happened! I mean, people were really talking about it and covering their cars, gardens, and protecting property throughout W. WA. My question for scientists such as yourselves -who also are keenly aware of the power of the misinformation age (AI, tech, screens, social media, etc)- is, was this just Mother Nature not doing what meteorologists anticipated? Was it an honest meteorologist mistake? And/or could it have been a result of lack of data due to various Federal agencies and “sciency” programs now going MIA or understaffed (as a result of DOGE firings and shuttering) that usually provide the science behind forecasts? Or was it a “simple” case of mass hysteria? I’m very curious to know the nature of this. I want to understand where and how manipulation in the digital world is occurring. I want information to make future assessments. In this increasingly confusing world where information is falling into black holes and our digital world view is so easily manipulated, I need to figure out how to wade through and sort out truth. I hope my request makes sense. Feel free, if you have the time, to ask clarifying questions if I haven’t communicated clearly enough what I’m asking.

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