01/27/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 01/27/2026 12:29
Published on January 27, 2026
On Friday, Jan. 23, the City of Fort Worth and the rest of North Texas began experiencing extreme cold and winter weather. Amid wind chills as cold as -5 degrees, along with ice and snow accumulations, the City assisted the community while experiencing over 80 hours of below-freezing temperatures. Gov. Greg Abbot signed a disaster declaration for 134 counties, including Tarrant County.
During weather events, the City focuses on prioritizing public safety; maintaining essential services for the community; caring for at-risk populations; reducing impacts; and maintaining clear and consistent communications that inform and educate residents. The City continually updated its Winter Weather 2026 page, providing timely updates and helpful information for residents to prepare for and ride out the storm.
Once the temperature drops below freezing, the City activates shelter operations to support individuals experiencing homelessness. Between regular emergency overnight shelters, Presbyterian Night Shelter, Union Gospel Mission, the Salvation Army and the City's emergency overflow shelter, the City was able to shelter more than 1,200 people on the night of Monday, Jan. 26, alone. Of that number, 195 were in emergency overflow shelters. Trinity Metro assisted with 138 transports from community centers to emergency overnight shelters.
Between regular emergency overnight shelters and emergency overflow shelters, more than 1,000 individuals have been sheltered every night during the winter storm. The overflow shelter will continue operating until overnight temperatures rise above 35 degrees.
Other notable updates include:
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