A new Severe Thunderstorm Watch was issued for most of Ohio, as well as for parts of Indiana, Kentucky and West Virginia until Tuesday evening. FOX Weather Meteorologist Bob Van Dillen breaks down the latest on April 29, 2025. PITTSBURGH – A powerful storm system that brought severe weather to the central U.S. on Sunday and Monday continues to charge east on Tuesday, fueling a 2,000-mile threat zone stretching from the Northeast to Texas . Extreme weather has been dominating the headlines since the weekend, with numerous reports of thunderstorms slamming communities with hurricane -force wind gusts, massive hail the size of teacups smashing windshields and tornadoes knocking over trains . Now, as those communities work to pick up the pieces, more than 69 million people from New York to Texas will need to keep an eye on the sky. Forecasters remain concerned that powerful storms could again produce large hail, damaging wind gusts and even some tornadoes . The highest threat zone has been highlighted across two areas of the U.S. , with NOAA’s Storm Prediction Center (SPC) placing portions of Texas and Oklahoma , as well as communities from Indiana and Kentucky to New York state, in a Level 3 threat on its 5-point severe thunderstorm risk scale . On Tuesday afternoon, a Severe Thunderstorm Watch was issued for about 8 million people in parts of Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia until 7 p.m. ET. Flooding , too, is a concern, as heavy precipitation inundates communities in the Plains and Midwest . Flooding in Potosi, Missouri during severe weather and heavy rain on Tuesday, April 29, 2025. Severe weather rocked parts of Missouri earlier on Tuesday morning, with thunderstorms producing 91-mph wind gusts in Springfield . In addition, schools in Ozark , Missouri, were told to shelter in place during a Tornado Warning . There have also been numerous reports of trees and power lines down in Freistatt , Monett and Aurora . Video taken on Tuesday, April 29 shows severe weather moving through Missouri as power outages surged and reports of damages came in. Power outages in Missouri spiked to more than 40,000 customers by late Tuesday morning as the tornado-warned storm caused damage in places like Springfield, where multiple homes were damaged by downed trees.
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