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New to UPS My Choice? Sign up Now.įor businesses, manage shipments like a pro with UPS My Choice ® for business. To be notified, however, by email or text when the status of your package changes, first track your shipment, then select Get Updates when reviewing your shipment status.įor personal shippers, get more control over deliveries and reroute packages to another location, such as any convenient UPS Access Point™ location by signing up for UPS My Choice ® service. Contingency plans are in place to help ensure that shipments arrive at their final destinations as quickly as conditions permit.įor the most up-to-date information on the status of shipments, customers can track a package on ups.com.įor the safety of our staff and customers, UPS Customer Centers within affected areas are not open for pickup or drop-off. We will work to ensure the safety of our employees while minimizing effects on service.

There will be no pickups or deliveries today in the affected areas. SHOULD PREPARE FOR VERY STRONG WINDS AND DANGEROUS SEAĬONDITIONS.Severe weather is impacting service in areas of Vermont. SHELTER UNTIL THE WINDS AND WAVES SUBSIDE. RECREATIONAL BOATERS SHOULD REMAIN IN PORT OR TAKE THE GALEĪ STORM WARNING MEANS WINDS OF 48 TO 63 KNOTS ARE IMMINENT OR WARNING.WHICH IS IN EFFECT UNTIL NOON PST MONDAY. THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN SEATTLE HAS ISSUED A STORM STORM WARNING IN EFFECT UNTIL NOON PST MONDAY.

O.W.0003.100118T0451Z-100118T2000Z/ĬOASTAL WATERS FROM CAPE FLATTERY TO JAMES ISLAND OUT 10 NM-ĬOASTAL WATERS FROM JAMES ISLAND TO POINT GRENVILLE OUT 10 NM-ĬOASTAL WATERS FROM POINT GRENVILLE TO CAPE SHOALWATER OUT 10 NM-ĬOASTAL WATERS FROM CAPE FLATTERY TO JAMES ISLAND 10 TO 60 NM-ĬOASTAL WATERS FROM JAMES ISLAND TO POINT GRENVILLE 10 TO 60 NM-ĬOASTAL WATERS FROM POINT GRENVILLE TO CAPE SHOALWATER 10 TO The following is an example of a storm warning issued by the National Weather Service office in Seattle, Washington. The only exception is that if the extreme winds are associated with a tornado, a tornado warning (or more likely a tornado emergency) will be issued instead. Winds in excess of 115 MPH (100 kt) will always result in new issuance of an extreme wind warning shortly before their onset, typically right before the eyewall of a major hurricane makes landfall, but possibly as a substitute for a severe thunderstorm warning in an extreme derecho event. In most cases, the warning applies to winds of 40-114 MPH for at least 1 hour or any gusts of 58-114 miles per hour on land unless a tropical storm warning, blizzard warning, winter storm warning, severe thunderstorm warning, or dust storm warning covers the phenomenon. On land, the National Weather Service issues a 'high wind warning' (Specific Area Message Encoding code: HWW) for storm-force winds, which also encompasses the lesser gale-force and greater hurricane force winds. The same flag as a storm warning is used to indicate a tropical storm warning. In US maritime warning flag systems, a red square flag with a black square taking up the middle ninth of the flag is used to indicate a storm warning (the use of two such flags denotes a hurricane force wind warning or a hurricane warning). If the winds are associated with a tropical cyclone, a tropical storm warning will be substituted for the storm warning and less severe gale warning. The winds must not be associated with a tropical cyclone. At sea, a storm warning is a warning issued by the National Weather Service of the United States when winds between 48 knots (89 km/h, 55 mph) and 63 knots (117 km/h, 73 mph) are occurring or predicted to occur soon.
