470 FXUS01 KWBC 210607 PMDSPD Short Range Forecast Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 205 AM EDT Sat Mar 21 2026 Valid 12Z Sat Mar 21 2026 - 12Z Mon Mar 23 2026 ...Record-breaking heat wave continues in the West and intensifies in the central U.S. today... ...Elevated to Critical fire weather conditions for portions of the Four Corners region, central and southern Rockies, and Great Plains... ...Wintry weather expected from the northern Great Lakes to New England... Strong upper level ridging remains in place over the western and central U.S., which will allow the record-breaking heat wave to continue while intensifying in the central U.S. today. The highest temperature anomalies are expected to shift into the Plains, where high temperatures are forecast reach the 80s and 90s, 30-40 degrees above average for this time of year. The Southwest can expected temperatures to once again reach the 90s and 100s this afternoon, which are about 20-30 degrees above average. Numerous daily and monthly temperature records have already been broken, and additional records are expected to be broken today. The early time of year, prolonged nature of this heat wave, and limited seasonal acclimation will increase the risk of heat impacts especially among sensitive populations or those without effective cooling. Adjust plans to limit strenuous outdoor activities to early morning hours, drink plenty of fluids, and seek air conditioned spaces. Some relief from the heat is expected on Sunday as a cold front pushes south across the Northwest, northern Rockies, and northern/central Plains. By Monday, this frontal boundary should sink south across the southern Plains, but the tail end of the boundary will likely stall across the Great Basin. This will keep the Southwest on the warm side of the boundary and allow the heat wave to continue into early next week. Precipitation chances will be limited with this frontal boundary, but some light to moderate showers will be possible from the Northwest to the northern Plains through tonight. The frontal boundary is expected to bring strong gusty winds to much of the Intermountain West and Great Plains as it passes, which will combine with very low relative humidity values, anomalously warm temperatures, and dry fuels to create Elevated to Critical fire weather conditions. The environment will be favorable for extreme fire behavior and rapid fire spread. Conditions will improve slightly on Sunday, but Elevated to Critical fire weather conditions will persist for the southern Plains. In the East, a cold front will be moving offshore this morning, with isolated showers tapering off across the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic. An area of low pressure is expected to track from the Great Lakes to the Northeast today through Sunday, with wintry mixed precipitation across the northern Great Lakes today and New England tonight into Sunday. This system will push a cold front south across the eastern U.S. Sunday into Monday, which will be accompanied by showers and thunderstorms from the Ohio Valley to the Mid-Atlantic, with isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms possible on Sunday. Dolan Graphics available at https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/basicwx/basicwx_ndfd.php $$