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PEC Departmental Safety Meeting March 2, 2010. Severe Weather Safety. Severe Thunderstorms. Considered severe if: Winds over 56 mph Hail 1 inch in diameter or larger Funnel cloud or tornado reported. Severe Thunderstorms. May also include: Frequent lightning
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Severe Thunderstorms Considered severe if: • Winds over 56 mph • Hail 1 inch in diameter or larger • Funnel cloud or tornado reported
Severe Thunderstorms May also include: • Frequent lightning • Flooding and/or flash flooding • Downbursts
Severe Weather Season in Alabama Two severe weather seasons in Alabama: • Primary: March through May • Secondary: November & early December
Lightning Cloud-to-cloud lightning in Australia
Lightning Safety • Get indoors at first sounds of thunder • If indoors, avoid: • Windows • Water sources • Telephone • Electrical appliances
Lightning Safety • If caught outdoors: • Get inside a vehicle if possible • Get to lower ground • Get away from tall objects (trees, poles, other people, etc.) • Crouch down with feet together
Lightning Safety • Unsafe areas include: • Canopies • Small picnic pavilions and rain shelters • Swimming pools • Open areas
Lightning Safety • If planning outdoor events be prepared. • Know the local forecast • Have a weather plan ready to activate • Suspend outdoor activities until 30 minutes after last report of thunder • Victims of lightning strike do not carry a charge and first aid may be administered as soon as practical
Flooding Events • Flooding is an excessive accumulation of water that submerges normally dry land • May include “regular” floods or flash floods • More people die annually as a result of floods than lighting, hurricanes, or tornadoes
Flood vs. Flash Flood • Flood – Generally a long-term event that centers around a river, creek, or other watercourse • A flood may not peak for days after a heavy rain • May result from heavy rains upstream from the affected areas • Classified as a flood if duration is longer than 6 hours
Flood vs. Flash Flood • Flash Flood – Occurs quickly when low areas cannot quickly drain after a torrential rain • May occur away from normal water courses • May occur when a water barrier (dam or levee) fails • May have little or no warning • Classified as a flash flood if duration is less than 6 hours
Flood Safety • Get to high ground • Stay out of basements • Do not drive through flowing water. Water 6” deep can sweep you off your feet • Do not let children play in ditches after a rain storm
Tornadoes • Wind speeds ranging from 40 to greater than 300 mph • Range from several yards in width to more than 2 miles • May stay on the ground for a few feet or dozens of miles
Tornado Rating System • Old “F-scale” (Dr. Ted Fujita, 1971) was based solely on visual damage assessment • New “EF-rating” (Enhanced Fujita, 2007) based on damage assessment, radar measured wind speed, and structural strength of buildings damaged
Super Cell Thunderstorms • Usually isolated from other thunderstorms – form out ahead of the “squall line” • Characterized by a deep, rotating updraft called a mesocyclone • Responsible for generating most tornadoes
Tornado Vortex Signature (TVS)Base Reflectivity “Hook Echo”
TVS: Storm Relative Velocity • Green – winds moving away from radar site • Red – winds moving toward radar site
Tornado Classification • Tornadoes and funnel clouds form from wall clouds
Tornado Classification • A funnel cloud has not yet reached the ground
Tornado Classification • A wedge tornado is wider than tall • Binger, OK
Tornado Classification • A rope tornado near Tecumseh, OK
Tornado Classification • A classic “funnel” tornado in Kansas
Notable National Tornadic Events • Deadliest in U.S. History – Great Tri-state tornado of 1925 (Missouri, Illinois, Indiana) • 695 confirmed fatalities • 219 mile damage path (longest in world) • Estimated ground speed of 73 mph
Notable National Tornadic Events • Super Outbreak (April 3-4, 1974) • Largest tornado outbreak in history for a 24 hour period • Extremely rare meteorological conditions • 330 confirmed fatalities
Notable Alabama Tornadic Events • April 3-4, 1974 – Super Outbreak produces three F5 tornadoes (Guin, Mount Hope, Tanner) (23 killed in Guin) • April 4, 1977 – F5 tornado hits North Smithfield Subdivision near intersection of Daniel Payne Drive and I-65 (22 killed)
Notable Alabama Tornadic Events • March 27 1994 – F4 “Palm Sunday Tornado” destroys Goshen United Methodist Church in Cherokee County during morning services (22 killed) • April 8 1998 – F5 tornado carves a 31 mile path through Oak Grove, Sylvan Springs, Rock Creek, Maytown, Edgewater, and McDonald Chapel (34 killed)
Notable Alabama Tornadic Events • April 27, 2011– Major tornado outbreak in Southern United States. • EF4 Tornadoes common across North and Central Alabama including Tuscaloosa to Birmingham, Blountsville, Cullman, Shoal Valley, Elmore County, and Rainsville Tornadoes (all EF4) • Hackleburg hit by EF5 (first since 1998)
Tornado Safety • The National Storm Prediction Center (SPC) in Norman, OK issues 1, 2, and 3 day outlooks and assigns a “risk category” • Slight Risk (4 or 5 times a year) – severe thunderstorm development expected, but relatively low coverage • Moderate Risk (1 or maybe 2 times a year) – like low risk, but with increased coverage & intensity • High Risk (rare) – used when a major outbreak is expected
Tornado Safety • A Tornado Watch is issued when conditions are favorable for tornado development • A Tornado Warning is issued when a tornado has been detected by radar or sighted by storm spotters • Tornadoes form quickly so you may have less than 10 minutes to execute your plan
Tornado Safety • Watches are issued by the SPC for a broad area • Watches are issued on a county by county basis • Watches are intended to encourage the general public to be alert to the possibility of changing conditions
Tornado Safety • Warnings are issued by the local NWS office • A warning means a tornado has been detected by Doppler Radar or has been sighted by a storm spotter • Only the NWS can issue watches and warnings – local news media simply report • BHM NWS office is located at the Shelby County Airport in Calera