Category Archives: SKYWARN

Circus tent tragedy was preventable — NWS had issued a warning

A father and his daughter died when a circus tent collapsed during a severe thunderstorm in New Hampshire. Aug. 3, 2015
A father and his daughter died when a circus tent collapsed during a severe thunderstorm in New Hampshire. (Sebastian Fuentes photo)

It appears that a severe thunderstorm tragically killed a father and his daughter yesterday, while they were inside a circus tent at a Lancaster, N.H. fairground.

The New Hampshire Union Leader reported that the tent collapsed at approximately 5:46 p.m. EDT. The collapse injured an additional 15 people, according to the newspaper.

This reminds me of another time that a severe thunderstorm killed people at an outdoor event: The 2011 Indiana State Fair.

Both tragedies could have been prevented. If the people at the circus had been aware of and heeded a severe thunderstorm warning that the local National Weather Service issued at 5:23 p.m., they would have had more than 20 minutes to seek shelter before the tent collapsed.

The yellow polygon shows the area of New Hampshire for which the National Weather Service issued a severe thunderstorm warning before the circus tent collapsed.
The yellow polygon shows the New Hampshire area for which the National Weather Service issued a severe thunderstorm warning before the circus tent collapsed. Click the image for a larger version.

Typically, a storm that warrants a severe thunderstorm warning has straight-line winds or gusts of 58 mph or stronger.  A big tent is the last place I’d want to be when winds of that speed hit.

We don’t know yet whether anyone at the circus knew about the warning. Severe thunderstorm warnings don’t trigger Wireless Emergency Alerts on smartphones the way tornado warnings do. Likewise, most localities don’t activate outdoor warning sirens for severe thunderstorm warnings.

Weather alert radios – which are available for as little as $30 – certainly sounded off when the National Weather Service issued the warning for Lancaster.  Very few people, however, carry portable weather alert radios with them to a circus.

Still, the entire audience could have known about the coming storm and taken shelter in fairgrounds buildings, or at least in their cars, had a circus staff member had been monitoring a weather radio and had the circus implemented an emergency weather plan.

Every organization that stages any kind of outdoor event has a responsibility to its participants, spectators, etc. to know about and respond appropriately to all weather warnings.

That includes circuses, state and county fairs, sports stadiums, etc.

In New Hampshire, the following chain of events would very likely have prevented all the injuries and deaths:

  1. Circus staff members program a weather alert radio for the county in which the circus is located.
  2. A circus staff member (e.g. ticket office staff) remains within earshot of the weather radio.
  3. Upon hearing the severe thunderstorm warning, a circus staff member alerts a member of management.
  4. Circus management makes an announcement over the circus public address system, in which they ask all patrons to seek shelter and provide advice on where to do so.

Of course, awareness of a severe thunderstorm warning is only part of the solution. People must also understand how dangerous a severe thunderstorm is, so they take shelter just as they would during a tornado warning. But that’s a topic for a different blog post.

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Enhanced severe storm risk in Northern Ind. tonight

Indiana map showing Probabilities of damaging straight-line thunderstorm winds or gusts of 58 mph or greater within 25 miles of any point between 12:30 p.m. EDT today and 8 a.m. EDT tomorrow. Red shading: 30% (enhanced risk). Yellow: 15% (slight risk). Brown: 5% (marginal risk). Source: SPC “Day 1 Convective Outlook” issued at 12:16 p.m. EDT.
Probabilities of damaging straight-line thunderstorm winds or gusts of 58 mph or greater within 25 miles of any point between 12:30 p.m. EDT today and 8 a.m. EDT tomorrow. Red shading: 30% (enhanced risk). Yellow: 15% (slight risk). Brown: 5% (marginal risk). Source: SPC “Day 1 Convective Outlook” issued at 12:16 p.m. EDT.

Extreme northern Indiana (shaded in red on the map above) – from Gary to Angola – has an enhanced risk of severe thunderstorms  tonight, according to the “Day 1 Convective Outlook” that the National Weather Service Storm Prediction Center issued at 12:16 p.m. EDT. Parts of Indiana farther south have either a slight risk (yellow shading) or marginal risk (brown shading) of severe storms.

The greatest threat is damaging straight-line thunderstorm winds or gusts of 58 mph or greater. The enhanced risk area has a 30 percent probability of such winds. The normal probability in that area at this time of year is approximateley two percent, according to climatology data from the National Severe Storms Laboratory. That means today’s probability in the enhanced risk area is as much as 15 times normal.

Farther south,  probabilities range from 15 percent (7.5 times normal) in an area that includes Lafayette, Logansport, Rochester, Kokomo,  Warsaw, Marion and Fort Wayne; to five percent (2.5 times normal) in an area that includes Terre Haute, Indianapolis, Winchester and Portland; to less than five percent (around normal for this time of year).

Any severe storms that threaten Indiana are most likely this evening and during the overnight hours.

Because severe thunderstorms can be deadly, even when they don’t produce tornadoes, it would be wise for people in the northern half of the state to make sure their weather alert radios are working properly before they go to bed tonight.

SKYWARN storm spotters should be prepared for possible activation this evening and tonight.

A bigger killer than tornadoes

A freightened woman stands on top of her car, which has been mostlyi submerged by a flosh flood
NWS photo.

When it comes to severe weather, not much creates as much fear as a tornado. But believe it or not, flash floods kill more Americans every year than do tornadoes.

Alex Kirchner, chief meteorologist of Rockford, Ill. TV station WREX points out this fact in an excellent article on the station’s website.

Flash flooding has killed an average of 85 people a year over the last 30 years, Kirchner explains. It happens when heavy rain falls faster than the ground can absorb it and/or faster than storm drains can carry it away.

“During a flash flood, remember that flooding does not only occur near rivers. Roads and intersections can be flooded quickly with excess rainfall.”

One of the best points Kirchner makes is that flash floods do not only occur near rivers. Excess rainfall can flood roads and intersections in urban areas quickly.

More than half of all flood deaths are vehicle-related, caused by drivers trying to drive through flood waters, then getting stuck and drowning. This often happens at night, because it’s harder for drivers to see how deep water is.

The National Weather Service activates weather alert radios and wireless emergency alerts on smart phones when it issues a flash flood warning. Avoid adding to the statistics quoted above by heading those warnings and the NWS slogan, “turn around, don’t drown.”

Why they never heard a tornado siren

Tornado siren. Outdoor warning sirens are not intended to be heard indoors.
W9LW photo

People often complain after tornado warnings that they never heard a siren. These people need to stop living in the 1950s and learn that “tornado sirens” aren’t meant to be heard indoors! Additionally, few (if any) jurisdictions have enough sirens to be audible throughout their areas, even outdoors.

“The idea that outdoor warning sirens are meant to alert people indoors is one of the dangerous tornado myths.”

The “Northwest Herald” of the northeastern Illinois city of Crystal Lake recently covered this matter after the National Weather Service issued a couple tornado warnings for its area.

The “Herald” correctly advised its readers that “the idea that outdoor warning sirens are meant to alert people indoors is one of the dangerous tornado myths.”

Let’s hope the people of Crystal Lake and elsewhere follow the article’s advice, stop foolishly relying on outdoor warning sirens and instead enter the 21st century by using weather alert radios and other modern, reliable warning technologies.

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The smoke detector of severe weather

Clip art of a tornado and smoke detector

NOAA weather radio receivers are the smoke detectors of severe weather. Just as every place (especially every home) needs a smoke detector (many jurisdictions now require them), every place needs a radio that will alert occupants to severe weather in their vicinity.

Dennis Mersereau's profile picture
Mersereau

I’ve previously used this blog to advocate the installation and use of weather radios. One of my favorite weather bloggers, Dennis Mersereau, recently used his blog to do the same. The smoke detector analogy is his, and it’s a good one.

Don’t sleep through a tornado warning!

Mersereau is also correct when he writes, “the best argument for a weather radio is that it will help protect you while you’re asleep. ” I made the same point several weeks ago during an interview with a local television station. Weather radios will reliably assure that you’re warned of dangerous weather anytime, day or night, whether you’re awake or asleep, just as a smoke detector will warn you of fire.

“The best argument for a weather radio is that it will help protect you while you’re asleep.”

One of the unfortunate things about weather radios, however, is that unlike a smoke detector, you can easily turn off a radio. My first weather alert radio would remain silent until the National Weather Service sent a warning tone, then it would scream with a siren noise.  Because a single weather radio transmitter usually covers several counties (parishes). my radio would often scream about weather that would never affect my home. The temptation to turn it off was great. I’ve learned that many people did just that.

Modern radios use a technology called Specific Area Message Encoding (SAME). It’s a system that allows weather radios to remain silent until a warning is issued for your own county. This means there’s never any reason to turn off the radio.

My smartphone won’t wake me

Mersereau points out that people who have weather alert smartphone apps often believe they don’t need a weather radio. I have both. The “Weather Radio by WDT” app on my iPhone usually sounds off at about the same time my weather radio does.

But there’s a problem. I have my phone set to go to “do not disturb” mode every night at bedtime. This keeps it from waking me with text messages or phone calls while I’m sleeping (except for calls from a few important people in my “24/7” list). The weather radio app does not override the “do not disturb” setting, so unless I remember to disable “do not disturb” when I go to bed (e.g. because severe weather is in the night’s forecast), the app will not wake me with a weather warning. I’ve heard that this disadvantage is common to all apps on Apple devices, because it’s a “feature” of Apple’s operating system, iOS.

I don’t know if Android apps have the same issue. But you can count on a weather radio to wake you, even when your phone is in “do not disturb” mode, its battery is dead, or it loses its data signal.

Less than $50

You can buy a SAME-equipped weather radio for less than $50. Aren’t the lives of everyone who might ever be in your house when severe weather strikes worth that?

Lightning has killed more than twice as many people so far this year

U.S. Lightning deaths as of July 6, 2015 were more than two times 2014 deaths by the same date. Photo of lightning near Fenway Park.
Photo courtesy National Weather Service

As of July 6, 2015, lightning has killed 17 people in the United States. That’s more than twice the number of people who died from lightning strikes by July 6 of 2014, according to statistics from the National Weather Service (NWS).

Every one of those deaths was preventable!

There are some important facts that you, your family members and friends need to understand to avoid being the next lightning victim.

The first is that you can be struck by lightning even if If it’s not raining or there aren’t clouds overhead! Lightning often strikes more than three miles from the center of the thunderstorm, far outside the rain or thunderstorm cloud., according to the National Weather Service.

You can be struck by lightning even if If it’s not raining or there aren’t clouds overhead!

That’s why the NWS coined the slogan, “When thunder roars, go indoors.” The point is, that because lightning can strike so far from the actual storm, the best way to protect yourself and your family from lightning is to head indoors immediately after you begin hearing thunder.

Probably the second most important thing to know is that no matter what you do, you’re not safe from lightning outdoors. Your only reliable choices are to be inside a substantial building or in a fully enclosed, metal vehicle. Nothing else works; not crouching down, now laying flat, not sitting in a car that has a fiberglass shell and certainly not standing under a tree!

Remember, everyone who lightning killed this year would still be alive today if they’d taken appropriate shelter soon enough. Don’t wait until it’s too late!

For more information, check out the NWS’ lightning safety page.

 

 

Huge Illinois hail stone provides incentive to heed NWS products

Infographic from National Weather Service Chicago weather forecast office showing huge hail stone (4.75 inch) that fell in Minooka, Illinois, June 10, 2015
Infographic from National Weather Service Chicago weather forecast office.

Softball-size pieces of ice fell from the sky in northern Illinois June 10, at around 7:20 p.m. One resident provided the National Weather Service’s Chicago weather forecast office (WFO) with a photo of a hail stone that was 4.75 inches across its largest dimension. It’s the second-largest hail stone on record in the entire state of Illinois. I surely would not want to be caught outside when stuff like that starts dropping!

Yellow polygon surrounds the area covered by a severe thunderstorm warning that the Chicago National Weather Service issued for the Minooka, IL area at 7:05 p.m. CDT.
Yellow polygon surrounds the area covered by a severe thunderstorm warning that the Chicago National Weather Service issued for the Minooka, IL area at 7:05 p.m. CDT.

This demonstrates why there should be no such thing as “only” a severe thunderstorm warning (a phrase I often hear from people who are less weather-aware). At least 10 minutes before that ice rock fell on Minooka, the Chicago WFO issued a severe thunderstorm warning that covered that area.

It also shows why “large hail” is one of the three threats that the NWS Storm Prediction Center includes in its convective outlooks. The  SPC convective outlook that was in effect at the time this huge hail stone fell indicated that the area had a slight risk of hail of one inch or more in diameter.

Hail probability map from the SPC convective outlook that was in effect at the time the huge hail stone fell on Minooka, IL.
Hail probability map from the SPC convective outlook that was in effect at the time the huge hail stone fell on Minooka, IL.

Before you saw this huge hail stone, you might have thought a “slight” risk was nothing to worry about. After all, it technically means that there’s “only” a 15 percent probability of large hail within 25 miles of where you’re standing. That seems like a small probability in a large area.  No reason to be concerned, right?

But consider this: The “normal” probability of one-inch or larger hail falling within 25 miles of the center of Minooka (or anywhere in Illinois) at this time of year is one percent, according to climatology data from the National Severe Storms Laboratory. That means that the “slight risk” in the convective outlook for the evening of June 10 indicated a probability that was 15 times greater than normal!

Want to be more weather-aware now? Below are some helpful links:

  • Storm Prediction Center convective outlooks depict the severe weather risk levels everywhere in the continental U.S. for today and each of the next seven days.
  • Storm Prediction Center mesoscale discussions indicate when the SPC is thinking about issuing a severe thunderstorm watch or tornado watch.
  • Hazardous Weather Outlooks (HWOs) issued by your local weather forecast office indicate whether local meteorologists expect severe weather in your area and whether they think SKYWARN storm spotters will need to activate. To find the HWO for your area, go to weather.gov, type your ZIP code in the box near the upper left-hand corner, click the “Go” button, wait for a new page to load and then look for a link that reads, “Hazardous Weather Outlook” in a section near the top labeled, “Hazardous Weather Conditions.”
  • Watches and warnings. If either are in effect for your area, they’ll also be listed in the “Hazardous Weather Conditions” section of your local forecast page (see “Hazardous Weather Outlooks,” above). Remember, a watch means conditions are favorable for severe weather, making it likely. A warning means that severe weather is happening now.

 

House passes weather forecast bill

The U.S. House of Representatives has passed a bill that would require the National Weather Service (NWS) to devote a larger portion of its research budget to improving forecasts of tornadoes and hurricanes and increasing warning lead times.

The Senate has assigned H.R. 1561, the “Weather Research and Forecast Innovation Act of 2015″ to its Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation.

Read more about the bill in a news release issued by co-sponsor Rep. Jim Bridenstine (R-Okla.).

WANE gets new meteorologist

Broadcast meteorologist Hannah StrongFort Wayne’s WANE TV gets a new broadcast meteorologist this week. Hannah Strong replaces Jesse Hawila, who took a job in Kansas City earlier this year.

Strong graduated this spring from Mississippi State University, which is known for its broadcast meteorology program.

The Fort Wayne television market is certainly not huge (it’s ranked at 111 out of 210), but it’s still somewhat unusual for a person fresh out of college to land his or her first job here. Hannah must have some strong (pun unintended) skills for WANE to have chosen her over more experienced candidates!

I encourage my readers, especially my fellow storm spotters, to join me in welcoming Strong to the market. You can follow her on Facebook, on Twitter at @WXStrong and on Instagram at @WeatherStrong.