While the immediate Pittsburgh area escaped the severe weather that was forecast for Saturday, winds of 70 to 80 mph and possibly a tornado caused damage across southeast Washington, southern Westmoreland and northern Fayette counties, according to the National Weather Service.

The weather service had reports of shingle damage in Mount Pleasant, a roof ripped off a hardware store in Scottdale and a mobile home rolled over near Brownsville, meteorologist Chris Leonardi said.

There were also reports of tree damage in the Donegal area, he said.

A tornado warning had been issued. The weather service will send a survey team out Monday to determine if there was one, Leonardi said.

“We definitely had an area of strong wind in addition to possibly what may have been a brief tornado,” Leonardi said. “We’ll make that determination on Monday.”

Westmoreland County Emergency Management Director Scott Stepanovich said one caller reported seeing a funnel cloud, but it was not confirmed and the call was disconnected.

Westmoreland County 911 took 450 calls between 3 and 4 p.m. — roughly half the number it sees over an entire typical day, Stepanovich said. Most of the calls were for downed trees and wires. No injuries were reported.

“It fortunately passed through quick,” Stepanovich said.

Just before 7 p.m. Saturday, West Penn Power was reporting about 56,000 customers without electricity in Fayette, Washington, Westmoreland and Greene counties, with about 26,000 of them in Fayette alone, followed by about 17,500 in Washington.

Duquesne Light did not have any widespread or significant outages.

Concerns about the weather prompted the cancellation of the second of two Morgan Wallen concerts at Acrisure Stadium. However, all of severe activity remained south of Pittsburgh. No damage was reported in Allegheny County.

“We did have the expectation of severe storms,” Leonardi said. “They were a little less widespread than expected. Pittsburgh escaped the worst of it.”

While there is a chance for isolated, scattered showers or storms Saturday night, no severe weather is expected, Leonardi said. Most of the rain and storms will be done by 1 a.m. to 2 a.m., with a warm, fairly humid night.

While there might be a few showers south of Pittsburgh on Sunday, it’s expected to be dry in Pittsburgh and most of Southwestern Pennsylvania, with highs in the mid-80s.