Pensacola International Airport ceased all commercial operations on Tuesday as a major winter storm unfolds and is expected to bring 4-6 inches of snow to the area, according to the National Weather Service.
Record snowfall closed the Pensacola International Airport, causing headaches for travelers. “My flight got canceled at the last minute Tuesday,” Daniel Gage, a Pensacola resident, said. “They rebooked me in for the Wednesday,
Pensacola International Airport announced that all commercial operations are closed Tuesday due to the winter weather."Please check with you
Pensacola isn’t out of the thick of it just yet. The National Weather Service extended its extreme cold warning for Northwest Florida from 9 p.m. Wednesday to 9 a.m. Thursday. Wednesday and Thursday are expected to be dry, which means we probably won’t see any new snow while temperatures continue to dip below freezing.
Pensacola International Airport is back open Thursday."Passengers, please contact your airline directly for the most up-to-date information r
City of Pensacola Sanitation Services will begin garbage collection at 10 a.m. Friday and continue throughout Saturday. Residents are asked to place trash cans at the curb by 9 a.m. Friday.
While local officials urged drivers to stay off the roads, nothing was going to keep Pensacolians from enjoying a rare snow day.
Milton saw almost 9 inches of snow in a historic winter storm storm that shattered the previous 130-year record.
Warmer temperatures are finally peaking over the horizon in Northwest Florida, but it's still going to be cold.
If the forecast verifies, it may be a once-in-a-lifetime storm. The record one-day snowfall in the city limits of Pensacola occurred in 1954 when 2.3 inches of snow was recorded at the Pensacola airport, according to weather service records.
Pensacola awoke to subfreezing temperatures for the second day in a row as a “significant winter storm” began to roll into the area.
Some areas in Florida racked up more snow than Anchorage, Alaska, which has seen just 3.8 inches since Dec. 1, according to AccuWeather (don't get too cocky, Anchorage had more than 25 inches of snow in October and November). So far during this meteorogical winter: