News

Hurricane Erin is still churning north and on track to pass by the Jersey Shore and Delaware beaches hundreds of miles off ...
The National Hurricane Center warned that roads in the low-lying barrier islands will become impassable, with waves of 15 to 20 feet crashing ashore.
The monster storm slowly began to move away from the East Coast on Thursday. Forecasters say it could intensify again to be a major hurricane.
Hurricane Erin began strengthening again Wednesday as it crept closer to the mid-Atlantic coast, its outer bands brushing North Carolina’s Outer Banks as beaches closed across much of the U.S. East ...
Erin’s path keeps the main core away from land however, the outer bands impacted parts of the Mid-Atlantic Coast Wednesday into early Thursday. The storm pulls away from the US, stays off the East ...
Hurricane Erin is expected to churn up the waters off New Hampshire as it continues to move northeast this week. The storm is ...
Although Hurricane Erin is not expected to make landfall, the effects of the tropical storm are causing flooding on the east coast of the US.
Shore weather expert Nor’easter Nick Pittman called the week’s weather “consistently blah.” Not every Shore week can be out of a postcard! Be mindful of flooding, especially at Thursday evening’s high ...
As Hurricane Erin moves east of the U.S., bringing impacts along the Atlantic coast, the National Hurricane Center continues to watch two areas in the tropics for possible development.
See your full local forecast: webpubcontent.gray.tv/wect/MAXSevendayWECT.jpg Or, customize your location and get your outlook anytime with your WECT Weather App.
In a Wednesday press conference addressing the potential impacts of Hurricane Erin on North Carolina’s coast, Gov. Josh Stein criticized the federal government for a lack of efficiency in releasing ...
Life-threatening rip currents brought by the offshore storm are forecast to last for at least a couple more days.