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Review of NWS Warning Fundamentals

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WFO forecasters issue Tornado Warnings to provide the public and emergency ... Warnings WILL include the possibility of tornadoes if a Tornado Watch is in effect. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Review of NWS Warning Fundamentals


1
Review of NWS Warning Fundamentals
  • DLOC Workshop 2008
  • Brad Grant
  • WDTB

2
Outline
  • Policy and Format
  • Functional considerations
  • Storm-Based Warnings Tips

3
Mission Connection of Warnings(from NWSI-511)
  • Purpose Tornado Warnings are issued to protect
    lives and property. WFO forecasters issue Tornado
    Warnings to provide the public and emergency
    managers with advance notice of tornadoes.
  • Issuance Criteria Using WarnGen, WFOs should
    issue Tornado Warnings when there is radar or
    satellite indication and/or reliable spotter
    reports of a tornado (Note non-scheduled,
    event-driven product)

4
Content of a TOR
  • Tornado Warnings will follow a standard bullet
    style format. WFOs should keep bullets brief.
    WFOs should include a call to action statement.
    The WFO Shift Leader on duty may discontinue call
    to action statements in warnings during
    widespread tornadic outbreaks. Locations should
    be larger towns and other familiar landmarks.
    WFOs may reinforce the warning with recent
    history to support their reasoning. Names of
    states and counties (or parts of counties) should
    be spelled out.
  • WFOs should use the nine part divisions (i.e.,
    northeast, east central, etc.) to identify
    portions of states or counties under warnings.
    WFOs may use mileage markers as reference points
    in rural areas when a storm is occurring or
    forecast to move over a major highway.
  • If a tornado moves over costal waters, a Special
    Marine Warning will be issued (see NWSI 10-313)

5
Format of a TOR
  • a. Type of warning warning location(s)
  • b. Valid time (15 to 45 minutes)
  • c. Time, basis for warning forecast impacts
  • d. Indicate which locations are to be impacted
    during the warning, using the nationally
  • approved pathcast and non-pathcast formats (see
    Section 4.3.5)
  • e. A BRIEF concluding paragraph with additional
    information, and call-to-action should
  • be included and
  • f. The latitude and longitude pairs outlining the
    area of greatest impact polygon drawn
  • in WarnGen will be included after the fourth
    bullet and call to action. Forecasters should
  • draw the polygon to be a subset of the warned
    county(ies) and show the area where
  • severe weather is most likely to occur (i.e.,
    unless severe weather is expected to cover the
  • entire county, do not mirror the warned county
    outline).

6
Mission Connection of Warnings(from NWSI-511)
  • Purpose Severe Thunderstorm Warnings are issued
    to protect lives and property. WFO forecasters
    issue Severe Thunderstorm Warnings to provide the
    public and emergency managers with advance notice
    of damaging wind gusts and large hail.
  • Issuance Criteria WFOs should issue Severe
    Thunderstorm Warnings when there is radar or
    satellite indication and/or reliable spotter
    reports of wind gusts equal to or in excess of 50
    knots (58 mph) and/or hail size of 3/4 inch
    (penny) diameter or larger.

7
Content of a SVR
  • Severe Thunderstorm Warnings will follow a
    standard bullet style format. WFOs should keep
    bullets brief. WFOs should include a call to
    action statement. The WFO Shift Leader on duty
    may discontinue call to action statements in
    warnings during widespread svr wx outbreaks.
    Locations should be larger towns and other
    familiar landmarks. WFOs may reinforce the
    warning with recent history to support their
    reasoning. Names of states and counties (or parts
    of counties) should be spelled out.
  • WFOs should use the nine part divisions (i.e.,
    northeast, east central, etc.) to identify
    portions of states or counties under warnings.
    WFOs may use mileage markers as reference points
    in rural areas when a storm is occurring or
    forecast to move over a major highway.
  • WFOs should NOT combine Severe Thunderstorm and
    Flash Flood Warnings. Warnings WILL include the
    possibility of tornadoes if a Tornado Watch is in
    effect.
  • If a severe thunderstorm moves over costal
    waters, a Special Marine Warning will be issued
    (see NWSI 10-313).

8
Format of a SVR
  • a. Type of warning warning location(s)
  • b. Valid time (30 to 60 minutes)
  • c. Time, basis for warning forecast impacts
    (range of hail sizes and wind gusts)
  • d. Indicate which locations are to be impacted
    during the warning, using the nationally
  • approved pathcast and non-pathcast formats (see
    Section 4.3.5)
  • e. A BRIEF concluding paragraph with additional
    information, and call-to-action should
  • be included and
  • f. The latitude and longitude pairs outlining the
    area of greatest impact polygon drawn
  • in WarnGen will be included after the fourth
    bullet and call to action. Forecasters should
  • draw the polygon to be a subset of the warned
    county(ies) and show the area where
  • severe weather is most likely to occur (i.e.,
    unless severe weather is expected to cover the
  • entire county, do not mirror the warned county
    outline).

9
Warning Creation Considerations
  • Duration should be 30-45 min in most cases (dont
    have a 1 hour warning out for fast-moving
    storms)
  • After 45 min, WFOs should issue a new TOR (60 min
    for new SVR) to extend valid time
  • Size matters (08 NOAA performance measure will
    evaluate normalized county area
  • Dont try to match polygons to county borders
  • Dont edit the warning headers
  • Limit call to action statements (and dont be
    careless)

Whole process should only take a minute or two.
10
Mission Connection of FF Warnings(from NWSI
10-922)
  • Purpose Flash flood warnings are issued when
    flooding is imminent. This product will be
    reserved for those short-term events which
    require immediate action to protect lives and
    property, such as dangerous small stream flooding
    or urban flooding and dam or levee failures. The
    geographic areas addressed by flash flood
    warnings may be counties, portions of counties,
    river/stream basins, or other definable areas
    (e.g., deserts, valleys). Flash flood warnings
    may include observations and forecasts for
    specific points. Flash flood warnings and tornado
    warnings will not be combined in the same
    product. Flash flood warnings should not be
    combined with severe thunderstorm warnings.

11
FFW Issuance Guidelines
  • Criteria A flash flood warning will be issued
    for a county or counties (zones -Alaska, Guam,
    and American Samoa) in a WFOs CWFA when
  • a. Flash flooding is reported and/or
  • b. A dam or levee failure is imminent or
    occurring and/or
  • c. A sudden failure of a naturally-caused stream
    obstruction (including debris slide, avalanche,
    or ice jam) is imminent or occurring, and/or
  • d. Precipitation capable of causing flash
    flooding is indicated by radar, rain gages,
  • and/or satellite and/or
  • e. Local monitoring and prediction tools
    indicate flash flooding is likely and/or
  • f. A hydrologic model indicates flash flooding
    for locations on small streams, or
  • g. A previously issued flash flood warning needs
    to be extended in time.
  • h. Flash flooding is imminent or occurring in
    one or more additional counties
  • (zones - Alaska, Guam, and American Samoa)
    currently not under a valid flash
  • flood warning. Note a new warning may be issued
    for an already covered county
  • if deemed necessary by a forecaster (e.g., for
    different area of a large county).

12
FFW Format
  • Issuance Time Flash flood warnings are
    non-scheduled, event-driven products.
  • Valid Time A flash flood warning will be
    valid until the time when flooding (requiring
    immediate actions to protect lives and property)
    is expected to end, as indicated in the second
  • bullet, or until the product is cancelled.
    When determining the valid time or considering an
    appropriate time for warning cancellation, the
    ending time for the flooding should be the
  • determining factor rather than the end of
    heavy precipitation. (most offices use 2- 3 hours
    for product duration routinely)

13
Follow-UpsSevere Weather Statement (SVS)
  • Purpose Severe Weather Statements provide the
    public and emergency managers with updated
    information for specific Severe Thunderstorm and
    Tornado Warnings. Updated information includes
    reports of observed severe weather. They also
    inform the public and emergency managers when all
    or portions of a warning have been canceled or
    have expired.
  • Issuance Criteria WFOs should issue a Severe
    Weather Statement to provide notice a Severe
    Thunderstorm or Tornado Warning has been canceled
    for all or portions of the warning. WFOs should
    issue a SVS at least once during the valid time
    of a Severe Thunderstorm or Tornado Warning. WFOs
    may issue a Severe Weather Statement to provide
    notice that a Severe Thunderstorm or Tornado
    Warning has expired. WFOs should issue a Severe
    Weather Statement to notify customers that
    erroneous counties included in original Severe
    Thunderstorm or Tornado Warnings (either in the
    FIPs/Zone UGC code or in the body of the warning)
    have been removed.

14
SVS Content
  • WFOs should issue Severe Weather Statements to
    address the status of severe weather warnings.
  • WFOs will not use Severe Weather Statements to
    expand in area or extend the valid time of
    Tornado and Severe Thunderstorm warnings.
  • If the area of greatest impact changes during
    the valid time of the Severe Thunderstorm or
    Tornado Warning, forecasters should update the
    latitude and longitude pairs of the polygon
    within the warned county or counties.

15
Storm-Based Warning Tips
16
Tip 1 Represent the Threat
  • Track the Hazard

This is the low-level vortex movement!
17
Draw Polygon to Convey Damaging Wind Threat
18
Tip 2 Be Aware of Text Overload in Big Warnings
1
2
19
Radar Images 15-45 min After Start Time
20
Tip 3 Dont Slice the Bologna (Warning) Too Thin
  • Polygon and Text should represent the Threat!
  • BULLETIN - EAS ACTIVATION REQUESTED
  • TORNADO WARNING
  • NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE JACKSONVILLE FL
  • 415 PM EST TUE MAR 22 2005
  • THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN JACKSONVILLE HAS
    ISSUED A
  • TORNADO WARNING FOR...
  • WAYNE COUNTY IN SOUTHEAST GEORGIA
  • THIS INCLUDES THE CITY OF JESUP
  • UNTIL 500 PM EST
  • AT 414 PM EST...NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE
    DOPPLER RADAR INDICATED A DEVELOPING TORNADO 14
    MILES SOUTHWEST OF ODUM...OR ABOUT 7 MILES NORTH
    OF PATTERSON...MOVING NORTHEAST AT 35 MPH.
  • THE TORNADO IS EXPECTED TO BE NEAR...
  • JESUP AND 6 MILES SOUTHEAST OF ODUM BY 435 PM
    EST

21
Tip 4 Watch Your Polygon
Cant expand!
CWA Border
22
Follow-ups can Make the Warning Smaller
23
Cancellations
Better to issue a new warning than to cancel (in
most cases)
24
Tip 5 Bigger is Usually Better
One TOR issued at 2215z to cover threats from
BOTH storms
County-Based VerificationProbability of
Detection (POD) 100 Lead Time 25
minutes False Alarm Rate 0
25
Tip 6 Keep a Slight Overlap with No GAP
B
A
26
With Storm Merger Imminent, How Do You Draw Your
New Polygon?
B
A
27
New Polygon is Larger (Due to Uncertainty)
B
A
28
Plan Ahead for New Interactions
A
B
29
How to Keep Track of Warnings
30
Summary
  • Warn and track for the main threat
  • Keep users at forefront (reduce text overload)
  • Remember the KISS principle (and think ahead)
  • Practice using the WES
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