Community Corner

First ATL Snow Of Season Causes Freak Outs, Closings | Patch PM

Friday's Weather Forecast | Airlines Cancel Hundreds Of Flights | Kids Stuck At Schools | Social Media Responds To ATL Weather

Share-worthy stories from the Georgia Patch network to talk about tonight:

Georgia Weather: A Snowy Morning, More On The Way

It was a snowy landscape as much of metro Atlanta awoke Friday morning, with more snow likely on the way. The National Weather Service is calling for a rain-and-snow mix to turn to all snow Friday and continue through Friday night.

Find out what's happening in Dallas-Hiramfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Airlines Cancel Hundreds Of Atlanta Flights Due to Snow

Friday's snowfall has caused hundreds of flights to be cancelled at the world's busiest airport, Delta and other airlines announced.

Find out what's happening in Dallas-Hiramfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Everybody Freak Out! Social Media Mocks ATL Snow Response

Atlanta and winter weather have a long, uneasy relationship. Plenty of us remember 2014, when ice and two inches of snow turned the metro area's highways into a scene from "The Walking Dead."

School Bus Routes Stopped, Parents Told To Pick Up Children

All school bus routes have stopped in Bartow County, and the school system is informing parents and guardians to come and retrieve their children from school. That is the message the system dispatched around 10 a.m. Friday, as weather conditions continue to deteriorate around the county.

School Bus Crash On I-20 Injures 6: Reports

Five students and an adult were injured Friday morning in a school bus crash on Interstate 20, according to media reports.

>>> Also Worth A Look Today:

>>> Across America:


Patch PM shares a few of the day's must-read items from our Georgia network. The Patch community platform serves four dozen towns, cities and neighborhoods in the metro Atlanta area. Thank you for reading.

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

More from Dallas-Hiram