Drought Information Statement for Central Pennsylvania Valid March 21, 2025 Issued by: WFO State College Contact Information: ctp.stormreports@noaa.gov This product will be updated April 4, 2025 or sooner if drought conditions change significantly. Please see all currently available products at https://drought.gov/drought-information-statements. Please visit https://www.weather.gov/CTP/DroughtInformationStatement for previous statements. Please visit https://www.drought.gov/drought-status-updates/ for regional drought status updates. Drought conditions across Pennsylvania have largely remained status quo over the past two weeks. A Drought Warning continues for Schuylkill County in central Pennsylvania. U.S. Drought Monitor Drought Intensity and Extent: D2: (Severe Drought): York, Lancaster, Lebanon, Schuylkill D1: (Moderate Drought): Fulton, Franklin, Adams, Dauphin, Northumberland, Columbia D0: (Abnormally Dry): Somerset, Bedford, Juniata, Perry, Cumberland, Snyder, Union, Lycoming, Montour, Sullivan, Tioga, Potter, McKean, Elk, Warren One Week Drought Monitor Class Change: Drought status across central Pennsylvania has remained largely status quo over the past 7 days. Precipitation and Percent of Normal: Precipitation over the past 30 days has been near to below average across much of central Pennsylvania, and well below average across the southern counties. Temperature Anomalies: 7-day temperature anomalies have been well above average across central Pennsylvania, while 30-day anomalies have been slightly slightly average. Hydrologic Impacts: Several communities, primarily across south-central and southeastern Pennsylvania, continue to enact either voluntary or mandatory water restrictions. Agricultural Impacts: Agriculture remains dormant for the winter season across Pennsylvania. Fire Hazard Impacts: The Significant Wildfire Potential shows little or no risk across Pennsylvania. Other Impacts: There are no burn bans in effect for any counties in Central Pennsylvania. Mitigation Actions: See “Hydrologic Impacts” above. Hydrologic Conditions and Impacts: Streamflows are ranging from near average across northern Pennsylvania to below to well below average across the south. Seven Day Precipitation Forecast: Liquid equivalent precipitation over the next 7 days is expected to be 0.10-0.25 inches across most of central Pennsylvania, and 0.25-0.50 inches across the higher elevations of hte Allegheny Plateau. Long-Range Outlooks: The monthly outlook for April 2025 is trending towards above average temperatures and near average precipitation for Pennsylvania. The latest monthly and seasonal outlooks can be found on the CPC homepage. Drought Outlook: The latest seasonal drought outlook calls for drought conditions to persist across the Lower Susquehanna Valley and southeastern Pennsylvania through Spring 2025. The latest monthly and seasonal outlooks can be found on the CPC homepage.