March 18, 2026

Nobody should 'apologize' for Monday's severe weather forecast


Who will apologize for D.C. not getting swept away by a tornado?

Tens of millions of people went through the day Monday under a severe weather risk that warranted the second-highest category on the Storm Prediction Center's colorful scale. Forecasters issued this level 4 risk ahead of a potential for widespread damaging wind gusts and tornadoes. 

Most indications pointed toward a significant severe weather day. The risk for damaging winds and tornadoes seemed to be the highest much of the region had seen in a decade or longer.


Residents took the forecasts seriously. Many school districts cancelled classes for the day to keep buses and children off the roads. Airlines preemptively cancelled flights at major hubs. 

Storms ultimately struggled to form through the day. Whether due to limited instability or "contamination" from too much precipitation throughout the day, it was clear early on that we'd escaped the high-end scenario that so many forecasters feared.


Multiple lines of thunderstorms still caused hefty wind damage. The SPC collected more than 500 reports of severe weather from Florida to New York, with the bulk of damage and 58+ mph gusts centered around the Mid-Atlantic. Several weak tornadoes also touched down.

Criticism began even before the skies cleared out. One writer for The Atlantic wants to speak to the manager of weather, demanding an apology for the forecasts and perhaps a coupon for half-off his next hailstorm.



Sorry that you were adequately prepared for a potentially dangerous situation? Deepest apologies for not withholding vital information that may have helped people in harm's way?

Some people are mad that they got nervous or changed plans for "nothing." And that's valid. A few of them may tune out the next severe weather alerts, and it's a gamble with life and property that every adult has the right to make.

But folks who are genuinely angry that the forecast didn't pan out should be honest about what they wanted to happen on Monday. Our society loves rubbernecking. After all, Twisters didn't sell out just because Glen Powell is hot.

What if this scenario had gone the other way, instead, and forecasters downplayed a severe weather event that caused major damage and casualties? To the folks who are angry, would no alarm be preferable to the occasional false alarm?

I live with storm anxiety myself. I had to huddle in my dentist's hallway with 20 other people during a tornado warning on Monday morning. I understand what it's like to get nervous before and during bad weather. But I was still glued to the forecasts and radar. I don't bury my head in the sand. I'm grateful to meteorologists who did what they could to keep us safe.

Forecasters are in an impossible situation. Weather predictions are so accurate nowadays that people expect perfection every time. For all the advancements in the science of meteorology, predicting the future still has its limitations and downfalls.

Sometimes all the ingredients for bad weather are in place, and then the bad weather isn't as bad as feared.

I'm sleeping fine this week. No apology needed.


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I graduated from the University of South Alabama in 2014 with a degree in political science and a minor in meteorology. I contribute to The Weather Network as a digital writer, and I've written for Forbes, the Washington Post's Capital Weather Gang, Popular Science, Mental Floss, and Gawker's The Vane. My latest book, The Skies Above, is now available. My first book, The Extreme Weather Survival Manual, arrived in October 2015.

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