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Central Ohio once again is covered in snow after the latest winter storm swept through the region overnight.Columbus City Schools, The Ohio State鈥
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Columbus Mayor Andrew Ginther is urging residents to stay home or find shelter before what's expected to be a heavy snowfall.The National Weather鈥
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The powerful storm is bringing record-low temperatures, widespread power outages and hazardous conditions to a swath of the country the National Weather Service calls "unprecedented and expansive."
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It鈥檚 a good day for most local students to already be off of school, as a large snowstorm moves into Central Ohio.Forecasts call for 2-4 inches of snow鈥
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Columbus City Schools have canceled all in-person and virtual classes as snow that started overnight continued coating Central Ohio roads into the Tuesday鈥
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Columbus City Schools is joining most other Central Ohio districts in canceling classes on the second straight morning of snow-covered roads.Higher winds鈥
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Holden Arboretum is still working to repair damages from heavy snowfall and winds in early December, as more severe weather moved through Ohio over Christmas. The Dec. 1 storm damaged roughly 350 trees around the arboretum, said Vice President of Horticulture and Collections Caroline Tait, along with 26 more at the botanical gardens in University Circle. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not something, unfortunately, done and dusted in a day,鈥 Tait said. 鈥淓ven though the storm was only one day, the impact lasts a bit longer.鈥
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星空无限传媒鈥檚 Letters from Home is collecting stories from our day-to-day lives during the COVID-19 pandemic. We want to hear reflections and thoughts from all鈥
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A wintry storm has blanketed much of Ohio with snow on Tuesday, leaving tens of thousands of people in the northern part of the state without power.The鈥
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The country has blown past records set in July and entered uncharted territory. Experts can't predict how high the new peak will go. Here's what's driving the surge.