Snow, ice, flooding forecast for eastern US as storm moves into Midwest

The storm that flooded California is moving across the country.

— -- The western storm that brought the flooding and mudslides to Southern California crossed the Rockies overnight and is redeveloping and strengthening in the Great Plains on Thursday morning.

Dozens of states are under warnings, advisories and watches for snow, ice, flooding and damaging winds from the Dakotas down to Mississippi and all the way to Maine.

The storm system is moving through the Great Plains and parts of the mid-South with snow and blizzard conditions in the Northern Plains and thunderstorms in the southern plains.

By Friday morning, the storm system will bring colder air to the Tennessee, Mississippi and Ohio valleys and will change any rain to snow and ice, with heavy accumulation forecast.

The heavy rain and a few thunderstorms will spread into the Carolinas and eventually into the Northeast.

Along the coast, a flood watch is in place from just north of New York City to Hartford, Connecticut, into Boston and Maine for as much as 2 to 3 inches of rain on top of the melting snow. This combination could produce flooding of local rivers and streams.

Snow accumulations in the Midwest will be up to a half a foot with ice accumulation of a quarter of an inch possible from Mississippi to Tennessee and Indiana.

In the interior Northeast, snowfall totals up to a foot in New England are possible. Ice could accumulate up to half an inch.

Behind the storm, another arctic outbreak will move into the eastern U.S. from the Great Plains into the Northeast and the South.

Bitter cold air moves into the Midwest Thursday as temperatures are forecast to crash all day.

The worst of the cold moves into the Northeast and the Southeast on Saturday night into Sunday morning.