Severe storms, tornado in north Alabama
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Pockets of severe weather will affect areas in the northeast, southeast and central United States through the Memorial Day weekend.
Heavy downpours and hail covered swaths of Middle Tennessee as strong storms blew through May 20, triggering severe thunderstorm and tornado warnings for multiple counties. At about 4:30 p.m., street cameras in Franklin showed heavy rainfall and large hail falling along Downs Boulevard and Highway 96.
A large area of severe thunderstorms is forecast into Tuesday night and will overlap areas in the Ohio, Tennessee and middle Mississippi valleys that were hit by deadly and damaging storms, forecasters say.
19hon MSN
Storms did hit the metroplex Monday night. A thunderstorm watch was issued and one storm arrived just after midnight, bringing strong winds, small hail and lightning along with a half-inch of rain. Two tornadoes have also been confirmed during the storms on Monday.
Severe weather leaves 28 dead, including at least 19 in storm-battered Kentucky. Storms Friday afternoon tore roofs off buildings, ripped bricks off of siding and downed trees and power lines.
The National Weather Service and AccuWeather both warn of severe weather that could affect the Southeast region, though forecasts remain uncertain.
FEMA representatives are canvassing Pendleton County to help residents impacted by April's severe storms register for assistance.
Tuesday is now a Severe Alert Day due to the threat of more strong to severe storms likely across Louisville and Kentucky.
Strong to severe storms possible overnight. Storms could bring damaging winds and large hail.
On Thursday, Jonathan says there will be ongoing storms in northeastern Oklahoma around 7 a.m. Those storms will cause a chain reaction of storms to develop in central and east-central Oklahoma near Stillwater, Henryetta, Seminole, Ada and Pauls Valley by 10:30 a.m.