Good morning West Alabama! It is Friday, January 10, 2025. It is the 10th day of the new year with 355 days remaining.

Friday Morning Briefing:

Well, that was an interesting drive into town at 5:00 this morning. After awakening to a beautiful blanketing of snow and ice across my yard and the street in front; it dawned on me that I was going to have to drive to work in that. Fortunately, there were no issues.

There had been enough traffic to leave tire pathways to follow, the city and state had done a good job of pre-treating and treating roadways and the temperature was just under freezing so that limited slippery spots.

As I made way down Lurleen Wallace Blvd. I was repeatedly passed by people in large pickups spraying the slush everywhere, covering car windshields and making driving that should not have been, hazardous.  They were driving far too fast for the conditions and that endangered themselves and other drivers. This behavior led to several crashes and a number of abandoned vehicles that slid off the road during the early morning hours.

I even encountered one driver with a cellphone in his hand, texting and driving on slippery roads. That is not good safety on a blue sky, dry road. And we wonder why northerners say southerners can't drive in the snow.

In spite of ourselves, hard work limited the number of roadway and other problems. Thanks to state, county and municipal emergency management agencies, local and state law enforcement, road crews and others who spent all night working to keep us safe on the roads and the power crews out in freezing conditions restoring power outages.

Conditions are improved in our area. However, officials are concerned that any moisture remaining on roadways tonight could refreeze, creating black ice and more hazardous driving conditions.

(Opinions expressed in Morning Briefing are those of the author and are not necessarily those of the ownership, management staff and sponsors of Townsquare Media Tuscaloosa.)


Weather:

Frozen precipitation has already switched to rain across most of West Alabama except for northern Lamar, Fayette and Walker counties northward. The National Weather Service is expected to remove most of West Alabama from Winter Storm Warning and Advisory by noon.

While the ambient temperature is above normal, road temperatures are still at or just below freezing according to ALDOT. That will make road improvement slow in some areas.

The cold will not disappear, Saturday will be cold across West and Central Alabama, with highs in the mid 30s to low 40s, but no moisture is in the forecast.

The Forecast: 

Today
Rain. High near 36. East wind 5 to 15 mph becoming northwest in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 100%. New precipitation amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.

Tonight
A 20 percent chance of rain before 9pm. Cloudy, with a low around 30. Light northwest wind becoming west 5 to 10 mph in the evening.
Saturday
Partly sunny, with a high near 38. Northwest wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the afternoon.
Saturday Night
Partly cloudy, with a low around 20. Calm wind.
Sunday
Sunny, with a high near 47. Calm wind becoming south around 5 mph.
Sunday Night

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Topping the News:
Winter Storm Impacts North Alabama
A Winter Storm that brought snow, ice and sleet to the state overnight created early hazardous driving conditions across West Alabama. Resident of counties along and north of the I20/59 corridor woke up to a white coating. Dozens of accidents resulted from slippery roads. Numerous vehicles were abandoned along roadways after sliding off.
More than 7,000 customers woke up in the dark as the wintry conditions brought down trees and power lines. Power crews have worked through the morning hours in freezing conditions to restore service to many.
While freezing precipitation turned to pure rain as temperatures edged above freezing in Tuscaloosa and Pickens counties southward just after 7:00 this morning, travel in northern Lamar, Fayette and Walker counties northward remains very hazardous.

ALEA Trooper Cpl. Reginal King says Tuscaloosa, Bibb, Greene, Sumter, Dallas, Perry, Hale, and Marengo counties are reporting no significant weather or road conditions.

Any precipitation remaining on roadways tonight may refreeze creating a dangerous black ice situation.


Governor Ivey Issues State of Emergency
Governor Ivey issued a State of Emergency (SOE) for Bibb, Pickens and Tuscaloosa counties northward to the Tennessee State line last night. The Republican governor also ordered activation of the Alabama Emergency Operations Center and agency divisions across the northern two-thirds of Alabama.
The SOE stated it had been issued by the governor due to wintry weather, "posing a threat to the health and safety of the people of Alabama."
Liaisons from each state agency and department staffed the State EOC and Division EOCs to support county and municipal responses to the Wintry Precipitation.


Schools Closed Across West Alabama

Most city and county public schools, colleges, universities and private schools are closed today due to hazardous driving conditions. Some school district like Greene County chose to continue classes virtually.
Schools had just returned from their holiday break on Wednesday.
The University of Alabama, Stillman College, Shelton State Community College, University of West Alabama and Marion Institute are also closed today and will resume operations Monday.


Winter Storms Creates Havoc with Air Travel at BSI

The Winter Storm is impacting flights into and out of Birmingham Shuttlesworth International this morning. 17 departures have been cancelled or had schedules revised. The news is not any better for arrivals where 21 have been cancelled or revised.
Airport officials encourage travelers to check with their airline for schedule updates.


Jasper Man Dies in Thursday Crash

61-year-old Jeffery N. Johnson was driving a 1999 Mercury Villager Wagon on Alabama Highway 5 in Walker County when he left the roadway and crashed.
Johnson was not wearing a seatbelt, was ejected from the vehicle and died at the scene according to troopers.

Ivey Dines with President-Elect Trump and Other Governors

With winter weather conditions playing havoc with North Alabama, Gov. Kay Ivey flew to President-Elect Trump's estate Mar-a-Lago last night for a dinner.
Trumped dined with 22 of the nation's 27 Republican governors at his Florida club, looking to help drive his agenda in conservative-run states after he takes office on January 20th.
The dinner was not open to reporters.


Tuscaloosa Municipal Election Qualifying Window Opens Next Week

Qualifying to run for mayor, city council and Tuscaloosa City Schools Board of Education, will be open from Jan. 14-28. The election is scheduled for March 4, 2025.
cityclerk@tuscaloosa.com

Topping Sports News:

Notre Dame First to Qualify for CFP Finals
In a back-and-forth game at the Orange Bowl in Miami last night the Fighting Irish turned a late interception of Penn State Quarterback Drew Allar with less than a minute remaining into a 27-24 win. The victory propels the Irish into the CFP National Championship game against the winner of tonight's Ohio State vs Texas contest at the Cotton Bowl.
The Cotton Bowl kicks off at 6:30pm Central Time.


Bama Women Suffer First SEC Defeat

The 18th ranked Crimson Tide lost its first conference game of the season in Austin, TX 84-40 to the No.5 Texas Longhorns at Moody Center. The Tide is now 15-2 overall, 2-1 in the SEC.
Bama continues on the road Sunday, facing Ole Miss in Oxford, Miss., at 3 p.m. CT

UA Gymnastics Opens 2025 Season Tonight

The pre-season 6th ranked Crimson Tide Gymnastics team will open the 2025 season at home tonight at 7:00pm CST.  The opponent is the ACC's North Carolina Tar Heels.
The meet will also mark the birthday for Bama mascot Big AL.


Bama Men's Basketball Faces Tough Road Foe Saturday

The Alabama Men's basketball Team (13-2, 2-0 SEC) puts their undefeated conference record on the line at College State, TX tomorrow night. The fifth-ranked Tide is coming off a strong performance at South Carolina Wednesday night.
Texas A&M (13-2, 2-0 SEC) presents a totally different problem for the 6:30pm CST tip off. The Aggies will have a strong home court advantage, an advantage that helped them to a decisive win over the Tide the last time they visited.
This is also the first-ever top 10 home matchup for Texas A&M basketball— and the Aggies have a chance to extend their win streak against AP top 25 teams to a program-best five games.


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Enjoy the white stuff before its totally gone and have a great weekend, ROLL TIDE!