Several Maryland school systems will close early on Tuesday because of a forecasted strong storm moving into Maryland.

  • Anne Arundel County Public Schools will close two hours early and all school-sponsored after-school activities will be canceled. | Read the alert
  • Baltimore County Public Schools will close three hours early. There will be no after-school or evening activities. | Read the alert
  • Baltimore City Public Schools will cancel all after-school activities. | Read the alert
  • Carroll County Public Schools will close two hours early. There will be no after-school or evening activities. | Read the alert
  • Cecil County Public Schools will dismiss secondary schools at 12 p.m. and elementary schools at 1 p.m. | Read the alert
  • Frederick County Public Schools will close three hours early. There will be no after-school or evening activities. | Read the alert
  • Harford County Public Schools will close three hours early. There will be no after-school activities and no after-school day care. | Read the alert
  • Howard County Public School System will close three hours early. There will be no after-school activities. | Read the alert
  • Queen Anne’s County Public Schools are dismissing beginning at 12 p.m. | Read the alert
  • St. Mary’s County Public Schools will close two hours early. | Read the alert

Maryland is bracing for a high-impact storm system on Tuesday that’s expected to bring heavy rain, flash flooding and damaging winds.

Flood watches and wind advisories will be in effect in the Baltimore area and across much of the state starting Tuesday afternoon, according to the National Weather Service.

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Parts of Maryland could see up to 3 inches of rainfall, forecasts WJZ, with much of that falling during a six-hour window in the early evening. Downpours and possible flash flooding could create dangerous driving conditions.

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In addition to rain, the storm system is also expected to bring damaging winds with gusts up to 50 mph, according to WJZ. Some areas on the Eastern Shore, especially those closer to the beaches, could see isolated gusts up to 60 or 70 mph.

The Maryland Transportation Authority said drivers should expect wind warnings, restrictions and potential temporary traffic holds on MDTA bridges, which include the Bay Bridge, the Francis Scott Key Bridge and others.

WJZ is a media partner of The Baltimore Banner. Baltimore Banner reporter Lillian Reed contributed to this article.