Latest Financial Aid Preparation: A Guide for Charleston Students Before Fall Billing
84°F Clear · Charleston
CHARLESTON, SC · LOWCOUNTRY EDITION · SUNDAY, JUNE 28, 2026
HERE City Network
HERECharleston
Why It Matters. HERE!
National

Severe Weather Risk Looms for Northeast and Midwest Sunday, Potentially Disrupting Outdoor Plans

Published June 28, 2026 at 10:02 pm | By Oswaldo Palma, Staff Reporter

Severe Weather Risk Looms for Northeast and Midwest Sunday, Potentially Disrupting Outdoor Plans

Severe thunderstorms are anticipated to develop across the northern Plains and extend into parts of the Upper Midwest on Sunday, June 28, 2026, according to independent weather-risk summaries. These advisories place a watch over outdoor activities planned for the day in affected regions.

The primary concerns identified in these non-federal forecasts are the potential for large hail and damaging straight-line winds. While tornadoes are not entirely ruled out, the risk is assessed as lower compared to the threats posed by hail and wind.

HERE CITY BUSINESS DIRECTORYOwn a business in Charleston? Get listed HERE.Free basic listing. Premium features available.
ADD YOUR BUSINESS →

This outlook is particularly relevant for individuals and communities in the path of these developing weather systems, as it may impact travel, outdoor events, and general public safety. Residents and travelers in the affected areas are advised to monitor updated forecasts and advisories.

While this particular forecast focuses on the Northeast and Midwest, the underlying principle of monitoring severe weather risks is a constant consideration for public safety planning across the country. Local weather services often supplement these broader outlooks with specific, verified forecasts tailored to individual communities, providing context for local events and travel conditions. This allows for more precise preparation and response.

For Charleston, the primary concern stemming from such national weather patterns is often related to the potential for disruptions to regional travel, particularly air and road transportation, should severe weather systems track further south or impact major transit hubs. While direct impacts from these specific storms are unlikely in Charleston, awareness of broader weather trends can inform local preparedness for any potential ripple effects on supply chains or travel schedules.

What's Happening
What happened?
Independent weather-risk summaries flagged severe thunderstorm potential from the northern Plains into parts of the Upper Midwest on Sunday.
Why does it matter to Charleston?
The main hazards named in non-federal summaries were large hail and damaging winds, with tornado risk lower than the hail and wind risks.
What's next?
The packet is reader-facing because it supports local clones adding verified local forecast, event, and travel-safety context.
Oswaldo Palma
HERE Charleston · NATIONAL

Oswaldo is a staff reporter for HERE Charleston covering local news, community stories, and developments across Charleston County. Oswaldo is committed to accurate, community-first journalism.

Contact Oswaldo
HEREmention Get Your Business Found in AI BE THE ANSWER. When customers ask ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Google AI who to hire — your name comes up. Learn More
HERE City Network

News Across South Carolina

Explore news coverage from other HERE cities across The Palmetto State.