Alabama
Level 1 severe weather risk added for Alabama today
A cold front will bring a low risk for a few strong storms to parts of Alabama starting later today, according to forecasters.
The strongest storms could have wind gusts strong enough to take down tree limbs and power lines, and there is a low risk for a tornado.
And this may not be the only chance for severe weather. The National Weather Service thinks more storms could be possible on Tuesday, although as of now severe weather isn’t officially in the forecast.
NOAA’s Storm Prediction Center has added a Level 1 out of 5 (marginal) risk for severe weather for part of Alabama for Friday (see the map above).
The Level 1 risk area includes most of north Alabama and northern and western portions of central Alabama.
The weather service said strong storms will be possible in Alabama starting this afternoon, and they could linger into the overnight hours.
Damaging winds are the main threat, but the Storm Prediction Center also has a very low risk for a tornado in its forecast for Alabama:
Rain was moving into Alabama as of Friday morning, and scattered rain and storms will be possible through the day today.
The chances for stronger storms will increase starting this afternoon as the cold front approaches, according to the weather service.
Areas that don’t get a lot of rain could again come close to record high temperatures, the weather service said.
Highs today are again expected to be in the 70s and 80s statewide:
No big cooldown is expected after this front passes through.
However that won’t be the case with the next system, which could affect Alabama from Tuesday into Wednesday.
There’s a chance for more storms with that system, according to the weather service, although severe weather isn’t in the forecast for Alabama so far.
The weather service said much cooler air will follow the Tuesday system, and Thanksgiving Day (Thursday) looks to be clear and cooler for much of the state.
Here’s more from the weather service:
NORTH ALABAMA
CENTRAL ALABAMA
SOUTH ALABAMA
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Alabama
Alabama Verizon customers hit by ‘SOS mode’ outage – here’s what to know
If your phone suddenly flipped to “SOS” in Alabama on Wednesday, you weren’t alone.
A widespread Verizon wireless outage disrupted calls, texts, and data for customers across the country, with Alabama included among states where users reported problems.
Outage reports began climbing around 11:00 a.m. Alabama time, with many customers saying their phones showed “SOS” or “no signal” messages.
On outage-tracking site Downdetector, reports surged into the hundreds of thousands at peak.
Verizon acknowledged an issue impacting wireless voice and data and said engineering teams were working to resolve it.
By mid-afternoon, at least some customers reported service returning, but Verizon said crews were still working on remaining disruptions.
What to do if you’re still stuck in “SOS”
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Turn on Wi-Fi calling (if it’s set up) and use Wi-Fi for calls/texts where possible.
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Try restarting your phone and toggling Airplane Mode on/off (simple, but sometimes forces a clean network handshake).
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If you need help urgently and calls won’t go through: use a landline, borrow a phone on another carrier, or go in person to a nearby police/fire station.
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If you have a newer iPhone and you’re in an area without any cell service, you may have satellite-based emergency options depending on device/support and conditions.
The FCC said it would investigate the incident.
Alabama
CLEARED: Crash blocks I-10 westbound lanes at Mississippi–Alabama line
JACKSON COUNTY, Miss. (WLOX) – All westbound lanes were blocked on Interstate 10 before Franklin Creek Road at the Alabama state line due to a crash, according to the Mississippi Department of Transportation.
The crash happened before 6 a.m. Wednesday and was cleared by 7:30 a.m., according to MDOT.
Early-morning drivers experienced delays and were forced to take alternate routes.
You can get real-time traffic updates HERE.
See a spelling or grammar error in this story? Report it to our team HERE.
Copyright 2026 WLOX. All rights reserved.
Alabama
Report: Alabama QB Ty Simpson officially declares for the NFL draft
Ty Simpson said he was entering the NFL Draft on Jan. 7, but then, the Alabama quarterback received NIL offers from multiple teams. The University of Miami reportedly offered him $6.5 million to stay in college another season.
Simpson, though, officially is headed to the pros.
Colin Gay of The Tuscaloosa News reports Tuesday that Simpson has submitted paperwork to the NFL, making him eligible for the 2026 draft.
Gay reports that Simpson’s base salary at Alabama was $400,000 and doubled to $800,000 with incentives.
Simpson is expected to participate in the 2026 Senior Bowl in Mobile, per Gay.
He completed 305 of 473 passes for 3,567 yards with 30 total touchdowns and five interceptions in 2025.
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