**METEOROLOGICAL BRIEFING - DULUTH, GA OPERATIONS**
Current conditions reflect a textbook post-frontal arctic air mass dominating the region. The surface temperature of 18°F with a wind chill of 2°F indicates dangerous cold stress conditions, driven by sustained northwest winds at 18 mph. The barometric pressure of 30.22 inHg is notably elevated, confirming high-pressure system control typical of continental polar air masses. The 12-degree spread between temperature and dew point, combined with 58% relative humidity, suggests stable atmospheric conditions with the cloudy deck likely representing residual mid-level moisture trapped beneath the subsiding air aloft.
The northwest wind direction is characteristic of cold air advection behind a departed frontal boundary, with winds channeling around the western flank of the high-pressure system. These synoptic-scale conditions are maintaining cloud cover despite the dry air mass, likely due to the thermal inversion common in winter high-pressure systems. Excellent visibility at 10 miles confirms minimal precipitation threat and good atmospheric clarity.
**Operational Impacts:** Immediate concerns include extreme cold stress for outdoor staff—limit exposure to 15-minute intervals with warming breaks mandatory. Vehicle batteries and fluid systems will be stressed; expect increased jump-start requests and cold-start difficulties. Customer lot traffic will likely be significantly suppressed. Wind chill creates hazardous conditions for test drives and vehicle inspections. Recommend prioritizing indoor operations, ensuring adequate heating in customer areas, and preemptively addressing vehicle winterization services as marketing opportunities. Conditions should gradually moderate as the high-pressure system migrates eastward over the next 24-48 hours.