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West Virginia faces winter conditions for the next 24 hours

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Much of West Virginia is in line for a winter storm to pass through in a quick 24-hour period. The system has already started moving through the midwest and will enter West Virginia late Monday night and progress from the southwest counties in a northeasterly direction. The storm system will cut a diagonal path across the state and leave behind a trail of weather problems.

“A lot of these places it’s going to be a wintry bag of precipitation. It wouldn’t be a shock for quite a few locations to see a little bit of everything, rain, snow, sleet, and freezing rain as this system moves through,” said Jeremy Michael, Meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Charleston.

The National Weather Service has placed all but a handful of counties under a Winter Weather Advisory from 11 p.m. Monday through 1 p.m. Tuesday. During that time, especially in the southern and eastern counties, the rush hour will be a headache on Tuesday.

“Oh yeah, especially for the places where it will stay all snow or having temperatures down around freezing,” he added.

The I-79 corridor from Charleston to Braxton County in some maps appears to be looking at mostly rain, but Michael said don’t be surprised if that turns out to be an icy area as well. The fluctuation in temperatures could vary only a few degrees and be the difference in rain and freezing rain or even ice.

“There’s still going to be some wintery conditions where we may get a little bit of snow changing to rain in the beginning and then on the backside of the system, later in the morning, it could end in snowfall for much of that I-79 corridor, ” he said.

Accumulations are expected to be up to two inches of snow. The western lowlands look to have the best chance for accumulation along with the mountains. The system could bring accumulations of ice on all surfaces as well. The system will linger late Tuesday in the mountains and parts of the Eastern Panhandle, but by Wednesday dry conditions will persist. Another system is being monitored for later in the week and into the weekend.

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