Showing posts with label Weather. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weather. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

National Hurricane Center posts best-ever storm prediction accuracy

By Ken Kaye

Sun Sentinel

(MCT)

The National Hurricane Center again broke accuracy records while predicting the tracks of 16 tropical systems in 2008, according to a report released Thursday.

The center reduced the mean track error to 55 miles when storms are 24 hours from landfall compared with a long-term error of 67 miles.

In the past 15 years, the center has improved track predictions by about 50 percent largely because models continue to be more sophisticated, said James Franklin, author of the report and team leader over the center's hurricane specialists.

———

(c) 2009, Sun Sentinel.

Visit the Sun-Sentinel on the World Wide Web at http://www.SunSentinel.com

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Fargo residents hold on as storm puts sandbags to the test

By Kaylee King
Chicago Tribune

(MCT)

FARGO, N.D. _ Flood-weary homeowners watched Monday as the water line inched down the trunks of sunken trees, sparking the hope that the worst of the damage by the rising and marauding Red River was over. But we weren't out of the woods yet.

We spent the weekend filling and stacking sandbags, and people were starting to breathe a sigh of relief as the river levels began rapidly dropping throughout Sunday and Monday.

But with the positive, there also came a negative: a winter storm warning. Local weathermen wearily reported the area would be blasted with 12 inches of snow. Meaning, the Red River could jump back as high as 41 feet, increasing pressure on already exhausted homeowners and sandbag dikes.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

Nicholas Shannon, a friend of mine whose parent's home usually welcomes the beautiful flowing river in their backyard, flew back from a spring break trip to help in the battle against the Red.

"I felt bad, because when I got here all the hard labor work was done," Shannon said. "It's OK though, now my dad and I stay up all night watching the pumps and spending good time together."

Shannon lives in St. Paul, Minn., and attends St. Thomas University. He will take the week off of school to stay home and help his dad while his mom is out of town.

Folks like Shannon are sprinkled throughout Fargo and are easy to pick out. They have dark bags under their eyes and glassy stares from the fight against the icy water that threatens their homes.

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

It was late last Wednesday when I got the call that solidified my decision to head home to help in the fight to save Fargo from flooding disaster. Nervously, my dad explained on the phone the flood of 2009 was an entirely different ballgame from the flood of 1997, and the crest could reach anywhere from 42 to 43 feet.

To most, those crest numbers mean nothing, but to the residents of Fargo, a few precious feet equal the gap between staying dry and losing a home to the muddy, murky depths of the Red.

This weekend was spent throwing hundreds of sandbags, checking multiple pumps and hearing story upon story of the flood experiences of neighbors. More than 75 close family friends were issued mandatory or voluntary evacuation notices _ often coming in the middle of the night from city officials or National Guard members. Five more family friends' sandbag dikes surrendered to the pressure of the river as water rushed into the basements and lower levels of properties, destroying everything in its path.

The skies above Fargo are consistently humming as massive Army UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters and U.S. Coast Guard choppers circle the area using infrared cameras to survey the dikes in search of the slightest leak, or worse, a total breach.

Non-essential businesses are closed, except hardware stores, which have extended their hours _ some to 24 hours _ in order to give the people of Fargo any possible resource to stock up on generators, pumps, rubber boots and other flood essentials.

The city has suggested no travel on the main arteries of the city, making it extremely difficult to get around. National Guard men and women sit at almost every intersection directing traffic, building clay dikes and helping in emergency dike breaches.

Residents in high-risk areas are on constant high alert, staying up every waking hour to make sure their pumps don't freeze or dikes become weak. But, unfortunately some fall asleep and disaster strikes.

Dennis Walaker, the mayor, revealed in the morning flood meeting that federal officials nudged him to evacuate the entire city, but he resisted. If the people of Fargo were not here to fight the water, the city would have been lost _ no question.

But surprisingly, the energy in Fargo is of positive nature. While sandbagging this weekend, jokes flew and people laughed at the bizarre nature of the entire situation. Hundreds of thousands of gallons of water lay bound behind a leaking clay dike a mere 150 feet away as we bagged a backup dike to protect the neighboring development. But worrying about the leak was not going to bring people down. Their attitude was simply "We are here, and we're going to have a good time battling this."

Behind the smiles and kind eyes, though, the people in Fargo know the state of affairs is precarious. Residents have seen floods before, obviously nothing like this record-shattering flood, but rising water is nothing new.

All they can do now is wait. The next battle is the major winter storm that threatens the integrity of not only the dikes, but could cause ice jams in the Red.

Come hell or high water, the people in Fargo won't let the city go down.

___

© 2009, Chicago Tribune.

Visit the Chicago Tribune on the Internet at http://www.chicagotribune.com/

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Monday, March 30, 2009

Red River drops below 40 feet, the lowest depth since Thursday

By Bill Mcauliffe, Matt McKinney and Emily Johns

Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

(MCT)

RED RIVER VALLEY _ The Red River dipped below 40 feet for the first time in three days Sunday in Fargo, N.D.-Moorhead, Minn. But a brewing snowstorm, a swamped school and the start of an overwhelming cleanup kept any euphoria in check.

Schools, colleges, many nonessential businesses and area roads remain closed as a new week dawned, with life far from back to normal. The river, at least, was dropping from historic levels.

After a record crest of 40.82 feet early Saturday, the Red had fallen to 39.80 feet by Sunday evening with projections of a steady decline all week.

"Amen. It's a great feeling," said Kyle Norman, a Moorhead resident. "We have said we're going to fight this thing and win, and we did."

Not that their work is close to done. Roger Degerman, who lives in the Horn Park area of Moorhead, dragged water-logged carpeting, furniture and even Christmas ornaments from his soaked basement.

With no trash pickup service expected for days, the huge garbage pile in front of Degerman's home is going nowhere. He worries that the adrenaline-laced volunteer effort might slacken as the cleanup intensifies.

"I think there will be a lot of victories in the cleanup, too," he said, hoping volunteers remain gung-ho.

Another sign that the cleanup has begun: Upstream in Breckenridge, Minn., Wilkin County highway engineer Tom Richels met with FEMA officials to assess more than 300 spots of damaged local roads.

WEATHER: GOOD, BAD, UGLY

Although the area could pick up more than three inches of new snow tonight, continued cold with temperatures in the teens are giving flood fighters at least a short-term break.

"The cold keeps the faucets turned off and allows water in the main stem of the Red, hopefully, to work its way up to Canada before the warm weather returns and ice melts back into the basin," said Scott Dummer, the hydrologist in charge of the North Central River Forecast Center.

Wind gusts up to 35 mph tonight could actually hasten evaporation and help matters. But prolonging flood conditions offsets some of the cold's benefit, Dummer said, because drawing out the high water saturates and stresses levees, dikes and flood walls.

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

That's what happened about 1:30 a.m. Sunday, when water tunneled under a flood wall and swamped two buildings at the Oak Grove Lutheran school in Fargo. The school, nearly wiped out by the 1997 floods, had built a metal barrier on one side of the campus to keep out floodwaters.

Neighbors of the school were awakened by automated telephone calls that a dike had failed.

"It was really hard to get the call last night," said Dawn Robson, who lives less than a block away. Her two children are in the eighth and 10th grades at the school.

Several hours after the dike failed, water continued to flow into a performing arts center and gym, prompting the North Dakota National Guard to attempt an aerial sandbag drop to plug the leak. Helicopter pilots unloaded at least nine 1,000 pound bags of sand onto the broken dike.

"I broke down in church this morning," said Robson, who learned that a charity she supports had opened an office in Fargo. "It was just overwhelming to think that now we're on the receiving end."

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

Many others were overwhelmed with gratitude for all the volunteer help.

"To have such a tremendous sense of community," said Errol Schoenfish, is one of the great lessons of this flood as he thanked the people who came to build a dike around his Briarwood home south of Fargo.

In Moorhead, the dikes held for another day as residents continued what Mayor Mark Voxland called the "vigil" of watching the dikes and keeping up with leaks.

Some residents worried about Moorhead's construction of a secondary dike on S. 8th Street, but Voxland insisted the city isn't expecting the primary dike to fail.

"But that river is moving very fast right now," he said. "And that live movement against the dike wall causes problems."

Moorhead officials said that they have lost five homes to flooding, although they don't have statistics on how many have been lost in Oakport Township, a low-lying area on the north side of Moorhead where "several" homes were flooded, according to city manager Michael Redlinger.

Fargo also reported five homes "inundated," according to public information officer Dan Mahli.

Voxland said he has no idea how much all the disaster preparation has been costing his city. "The checkbook is open," he said, "and we haven't been able to balance it yet."

When the number becomes available, he said, "you'll know, because I'll be extremely pale."

Minnesota has received a federal emergency declaration, which means that the city will have to foot about 25 percent of the bill, although it could end up being less.

To the north, ice jams

Down the Red near Oslo, Minn., a series of ice jams and a 4-mile-long slab of ice have prompted officials to place boxcars on a railroad bridge in hopes that the extra weight will keep the span in its moorings. Using explosives to break the jam has been ruled out for environmental reasons, Minnesota emergency spokesman Doug Neville said.

The ice slab is 18 miles south of Oslo. Officials fear the backup caused by the jams could lift the railroad bridge into the river about 25 miles north of Grand Forks, N.D.

___

(Staff writers Curt Brown and Kevin Giles contributed to this report.)

___

© 2009, Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

Visit the Star Tribune Web edition on the World Wide Web at http://www.startribune.com

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

In Fargo, flood crest could be highest ever


Michael Stensgaard uses one of his family's boat to get back to their home a few yards away from the Red River in Minnesota, March 25, 2009. The water is over 40 feet and has completely surrounded their home. (Richard Tsong-Taatarii/Minneapolis Star Tribune)

By Matt McKinney, Allie Shah and Bill McAuliffe

Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

(MCT)

FARGO, N.D. _ Shifting from confident to jittery, flood fighters in and around Fargo intensified their dike-building Wednesday after a dire new forecast called for the Red River to swell to its highest level ever by Saturday.

Authorities used airboats, helicopters and large military trucks to rescue dozens of trapped residents in the North Dakota towns of Oxbow and Abercombie. And if the rising river weren't enough to heighten anxiety, eight inches of snow blew in with ice and wind to handicap sandbagging efforts and close highways not already swamped with floodwater.

"It's uncharted territory," Fargo Mayor Dennis Walaker said. "If nature has anything else to throw at us, it'd have to be a tornado."

The mayor pleaded for more sandbag volunteers and urged exhausted crews to raise the dikes another foot _ to 43 feet _ before Saturday's expected crest of 41 feet. That would eclipse the 1897 record level of 40.1 feet in Fargo and the 39.57 feet reached during the devastating 1997 flood.

Beginning Thursday, Fargo officials will start distributing evacuation information.

"People are starting to get worried," said Robin Mattson, a staff sergeant with the Minnesota National Guard, supervising intersections across the river in Moorhead.

When one resident tried to drive his sand-filled pickup over an earthen levee, police were called to issue a warning.

"He ignored the National Guard to put his own sand in, endangering everyone else," Mattson said.

For the most part, though, neighbors continue to help each other in an overwhelming spirit of cooperation. For a while Wednesday afternoon, Moorhead resident Scott Peterson worried he wouldn't get enough sandbags to raise his backyard dike the extra foot authorities have requested.

Just then, a group of college students arrived along with a truck towing a trailer of sandbags.

"If it wasn't for Concordia College," Peterson said, "our neighborhood would be under."

In Oxbow, a small town just south of Fargo, water from the Red spilled onto several residential streets, trapping homeowners. Cass County Sheriff Paul Laney said airboats helped on a dozen rescues and he anticipates many more in coming days.

"A large number of people are in their homes and we know they're going to need to come out," he said, adding that airboats and military trucks are the only vehicles that could pass through some of the streets submerged in 2 feet of standing water.

A Coast Guard helicopter plucked a family from a farmhouse two miles southwest of Abercrombie, N.D., where overland flooding from the Wild Rice River increased rapidly. Richland County, N.D., spokesman Warren Stokes said five adults and one child were rescued from the house by a basket and taken to a social service center in Wahpeton.

Flood-fighting crews in Abercrombie had put up dikes to protect the town against Red River flooding, but they shifted their efforts to battle overland flooding from Wild Rice River to the west.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

"We've never worried about anything from that direction," said Vice Mayor David Hammond, adding that the town would open its school to house any farmers flooded out of their homes.

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

Across the river in Wolverton, Minn. _ which sits an eighth of a mile from the river bank _ water flowed into the streets in lower areas. Maryann Olthoff was hoping that sandbag dikes up to 5 feet tall around her house would hold back the water, which she said was higher than anybody in the town of 120 people has ever seen.

"God willing and the creek don't rise," Olthoff said.

Back up in Fargo, bundled-up residents and volunteers braved the miserable conditions, piling up sandbags in vulnerable neighborhoods amid blowing snow, temperatures in the 20s and a strong wind.

"The bags are starting to freeze," said Martin Fisher, adding another layer of sandbags onto his backyard dike. "That's a problem. You can't put rock on top of rock."

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

Despite the city's efforts to keep the bags warm by storing them overnight in a heated garage, some bags were as hard as stone.

"Frozen!" one volunteer called out, alerting the rest of the assembly line.

Many flood-fighters swapped their rain boots for their winter boots, anticipating the pain that comes from standing outside for hours at a time in the icy mud. But slinging sandbags really builds up a sweat, and you hardly notice the cold, according to Bill Eral, who drove from St. Paul, Minn., to help.

With an outside fire pit, Sarah Keim's driveway was the place to be in Fargo's Oak Creek neighborhood. A steady stream of neighbors and volunteers popped in to warm their hands and nibble on homemade banana bread.

Between the snow and the flooding, several highways from Ada to Zerkel were closed or under water in western Minnesota. State officials urged motorists to call 511 or click on www.511mn.org for current road conditions.

___

(Staff writers Curt Brown and Bob von Sternberg contributed to this report.)

___

© 2009, Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

Visit the Star Tribune Web edition on the World Wide Web at http://www.startribune.com

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

_____

PHOTOS (from MCT Photo Service, 202-383-6099): FLOODING

GRAPHICS (from MCT Graphics, 202-383-6064): 20090325 River FLOODING and 20090325 FLOODING dikes

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Fire Threat Continues Tuesday

By James Brierton
The MatadorOnline.com

With dry grass and breezy conditions expected again Tuesday, the National Weather Service has once again issued a Red Flag Warning for Long Island.

Multiple fire departments, including Centereach, Nesconset and Lake Grove, were on scene of a fire in Lake Grove Tuesday afternoon. The brush fire broke out in woodlands behind a local elementary school and came within a few dozen feet of nearby homes.

The National Weather Service had issued a Red Flag Warning for the entire tri-state Monday and reissued it for Long Island Tuesday morning.

"Residents are urged to keep vehicle out of grassy areas and to ensure proper disposal of any smoking materials," says a forecaster from the National Weather Service identified only as "JST" in the forecast. "It only takes a careless disposal of a cigarette to ignite a wild fire and with the dry and windy weather conditions a small fire could spread rapidly."

Sandbaggers race against time as Red River rises

By Bill McAuliffe, Matt McKinney and Bob von Sternberg

Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

(MCT)

FARGO, N.D. _ Mud-soaked and aching, residents of Breckenridge, Minn., spent Monday trying to build a walled city against the marauding Red River and its tributaries.

By evening, after a day of sandbagging to fill gaps in permanent dikes, residents and officials believed they were protected 1 foot higher than the 19-foot crest predicted to pass through the city beginning at midday Tuesday.

"That was critical," said Wilkin County highway engineer Tom Richels. "We're feeling pretty good right now."

Thousands of volunteers up and down the Red River Valley toiled mightily Monday as potential record flooding threatened those along the north-flowing river. In Fargo, where classes at North Dakota State University were postponed indefinitely so students could help, sandbaggers worked to fill nearly 2 million sandbags ahead of Thursday's anticipated crest.

"This is coming up way faster than in 1997. We had a lot more time then," said college student Krista Ramstad as she took a break Monday night with tired friends who were filling sandbags in the Fargodome. Some of them had worked since Sunday morning.

Already main roads _ Interstate 29 on the North Dakota side and Hwy. 75 in Minnesota _ were closed between Wahpeton, N.D., and Fargo because portions were under water.

Richels estimated Monday morning that 80 percent of his county's roads outside the city of Breckenridge were under water and closed.

It probably will only get worse as heavy rain, eventually turning to snow, will bedevil the region this week.

According to the National Weather Service, rain will accumulate by as much as an inch before turning Tuesday night to snow that will linger through the rest of the week.

That could be a mixed blessing, as colder temperatures slow the melting that's feeding the flood, but make it tougher for volunteers to erect the cities' flood defenses.

As night fell Monday, heavy rain was falling in Breckenridge, accompanied by thunder and lightning.

Rain of more than half an inch in the region could push the city's crest toward 20 feet, higher even than the 19.4-foot record set in 1997, which devastated Breckenridge, its sister city of Wahpeton across the river, and began a wave of misery that culminated at Grand Forks, N.D., and beyond.

For some homeowners, slinging sandbags is becoming a wearying spring routine.

Chris Vedder, heaving sandbags in a long line of volunteers trying to protect some private homes across the street from where she and her husband live, said the effort had a strange effect on her.

"You get happy to see another semi" filled with sandbags, she said. "It's a real sick excitement."

Vedder's home in Breckenridge was raised 3 feet after the foundation caved in 1997. "We can't keep doing this," she said.

Hydrologists have indicated that this year's flooding is the result of not enough of last fall's record rains draining into rivers. Much of that rain froze solid and deep in the soil, holding it all winter, along with deeper-than-average winter snows.

That said, a diversion ditch built after the 1997 flood is supposed to keep the water away from downtown Breckenridge. "We think it's going to do what it was designed to do," said Steve Buan, a hydrologist for the National Weather Service's regional forecast.

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

The concrete floor of the Fargodome, the city stadium that was supposed to be getting prepared for a championship rodeo competition, instead held hundreds of volunteers swarming six piles of sand. There was no hi-tech sandbagging machinery here, just shovels and white plastic bags. A crowd of 200 volunteers swarmed the floor Monday evening, their pants and sweatshirts covered in sand as they piled 40-pound bags onto pallets for waiting bulldozers and trucks to haul away.

"The evening shift is the toughest and we've had to shut down for lack of volunteers in the middle of the night," Fargo Mayor Dennis Walaker said. "But today, we've got people coming from (NDSU) and the high school, so that should help. We still need 400 to 500 people a shift to pull this off. But things are looking better than yesterday."

Eighty football players from NDSU took shifts Monday. Public high school students were to be released if they wanted to help. Even inmates got into the act, with Cass County jail residents filling sandbags overnight.

"I think today was a really good day," said Kristi Brandt, who held open a bag as her sons Alex, 6, and Jacob, 11, worked nearby.

Memories of the 1997 flood that devastated Grand Forks have people in Fargo prepared for the worst. Ramstad, the college student who said her family lost half of their belongings in that flood, said her parents were once again shoring up their house in Ada, Minn., against a rising tide. "I was supposed to leave for school (Sunday) when my mom started screaming from the basement because the water's rushing down the walls," she said.

Her father, a highway department supervisor, hasn't been home for five days while he fights the flood elsewhere.

Ramstad said she doesn't want to go back to school. For now, she wants to sandbag.

"We were out earlier building dikes," said Jeran Hilde, who said he worked until 1 a.m. early Monday on the relief effort.

"I couldn't sit up this morning," said Ramstad, whose jeans were covered with sand. "This is pretty much what I've been wearing for the last 48 hours."

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

A student from Horace, N.D., a small town just outside Fargo, said crews shut off the city water recently to relieve the drains.

"They just turned it back on today but the whole town smells like sewer," said Jaden Fedora. No one has lost their house there, she said, but there wasn't much in the way of sandbags to stop the water.

Back on the floor of the Fargodome, volunteers prepared to work into the night.

"We can use as many as we can get," said Capt. Lee Soeth of the Fargo Fire Department.

"I'm doing as much as I can, I guess," said Matt Blum, an NDSU student.

He held a bag open while a friend loaded it with sand. Behind him sat a pile of empty white bags.

Nearby, Fargo elementary school teacher Sheri Wanzek said she planned to stay, "until I tire out."

___

© 2009, Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

Visit the Star Tribune Web edition on the World Wide Web at http://www.startribune.com

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Monday, March 23, 2009

Red Flag Warning Issued

...RED FLAG WARNING IN EFFECT UNTIL 8 PM EDT THIS EVENING...

THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN UPTON HAS ISSUED A RED FLAG
WARNING...WHICH IS IN EFFECT UNTIL 8 PM EDT THIS EVENING.

NORTHWEST WINDS OF 15 TO 20 MPH WITH FREQUENT GUSTS UP TO 25 MPH
WERE ALREADY OCCURRING IN SPOTS OVER EASTERN LONG ISLAND LATE THIS
MORNING...AND WILL BE WIDESPREAD THIS AFTERNOON AND EARLY
EVENING...ALONG WITH MINIMUM RELATIVE HUMIDITIES OF 15 TO 20
PERCENT. IF IGNITION OCCURS...THESE WEATHER CONDITIONS IN
COMBINATION WITH DRY FINE FUELS DUE TO LACK OF RECENT WETTING
RAINS AND LACK OF GREENUP WOULD PROMOTE RAPID FIRE GROWTH THIS
AFTERNOON AND EARLY EVENING.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...

A RED FLAG WARNING MEANS THAT CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS
ARE OCCURRING OR IMMINENT. A COMBINATION OF STRONG WINDS...LOW
RELATIVE HUMIDITY...AND DRY FUELS WILL PROMOTE RAPID FIRE GROWTH.

&&

$$

BG/BS/TM

Friday, March 20, 2009

AccuWeather forecaster predicts 3 hurricanes this season

By Ken Kaye

Sun Sentinel

(MCT)

Joe Bastardi, chief hurricane forecaster for AccuWeather.com, calls for three hurricanes to either strike or brush the U.S. coast this year, and he thinks the Eastern Seaboard will be the primary target.

"I'm very nervous about the Eastern Seaboard, particularly from Cape Hatteras (N.C.) northward," he said Thursday. "That doesn't mean Florida can't get hit."

He thinks one of the hurricanes will be major, with winds of at least 110 mph.

Overall, he predicts 13 named storms, including eight hurricanes, with two of those being major. That would be a significant reduction compared to last year, when 16 named storms, including eight hurricanes, five major, emerged.

The East Coast should be more under the gun than the Gulf of Mexico or Caribbean because of a "natural pulse in atmosphere," Bastardi said. He thinks cooler temperatures in the Atlantic and an increase in Saharan dust will hamper storm formation this year.

"We don't want people thinking there's nothing going on this year _ because there certainly is," he said.

Bastardi released his outlook more than two months before the official June 1 start of hurricane season. He is among a handful of government and private forecasters who develop the long-range predictions.

In an outlook released in December, Phil Klotzbach and William Gray of Colorado State University called for 14 named storms, including seven hurricanes. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration will release its outlook in May.

Officials at the National Hurricane Center, including Director Bill Read, have advised the public not to focus on seasonal forecasts but rather be well-prepared in case just one storm hits.

Bastardi has been off the mark in the past few years in predicting the number of hurricanes that would impact the U.S. coast. On the other hand, he notes most years, he has been correct in identifying the region that would see the most tropical activity.

___

© 2009, Sun Sentinel.

Visit the Sun-Sentinel on the World Wide Web at http://www.SunSentinel.com

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Monday, March 2, 2009

Snow Emergency Declared

Monday - Midday Update
Here is the latest on our snow storm from Megan Russ in the SmithtownRadio.com Weather Center...

>Suffolk County Executive Steve Levy has declared a snow emergency for Suffolk County. He says this will help recieve federal and state emergency fudning if need be down the road
>A Winter Storm Warning is in effect until 6 pm et
>A foot of snow accumulation thus far outside SmithtownRadio.com studios
>LIPA: No major outages
>LIRR: The LIRR is experiencing delays of 10-15 minutes due to weather-related conditions.

...ADDITIONAL SNOWFALL EXPECTED TODAY...

A WINTER STORM WARNING FOR HEAVY SNOW REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 6
PM EST THIS EVENING.

BANDS OF MODERATE TO OCCASIONALLY HEAVY SNOW WILL MOVE BACK INTO
THE NEW YORK CITY METROPOLITAN AREA AND THE LOWER HUDSON VALLEY
THIS MORNING. AFTER A BRIEF LULL...THIS SNOW WILL ALSO RETURN TO
EASTERN LONG ISLAND AND SOUTHERN CONNECTICUT BY LATE MORNING.

ADDITIONAL SNOWFALL OF 2 TO 4 INCHES IS EXPECTED TODAY. THIS WILL
BRING TOTAL ACCUMULATIONS UP TO 6 TO 12 INCHES IN ORANGE AND
WESTERN PASSAIC COUNTIES...8 TO 12 INCHES IN THE NEW YORK CITY
METROPOLITAN AREA...9 TO 13 INCHES IN SOUTHERN CONNECTICUT...AND 10
TO 15 INCHES ACROSS CENTRAL AND EASTERN LONG ISLAND.

NORTH WINDS SUSTAINED AT 15 TO 25 MPH AND GUSTING TO 30 TO 40 MPH
WILL CAUSE BLOWING AND DRIFTING SNOW...WITH VISIBILITIES OF LESS
THAN A QUARTER OF A MILE AT TIMES AND NEAR BLIZZARD CONDITIONS.

A WINTER STORM WARNING FOR HEAVY SNOW MEANS SIGNIFICANT AMOUNTS
OF SNOW ARE EXPECTED OR OCCURRING. STRONG WINDS ARE ALSO
POSSIBLE. THIS WILL MAKE TRAVEL VERY HAZARDOUS OR IMPOSSIBLE.

STAY TUNED TO NOAA ALL HAZARDS WEATHER RADIO OR VISIT OUR WEB
SITE AT WEATHER.GOV/NYC FOR FURTHER DETAILS AND UPDATES.

$$

Winter Storm Warning: Overnight Update

Here is the latest from Megan Russ in the SmithtownRadio.com Weather Center:

>No school Monday
>Winter Storm Warning in effect until Mon 6 pm et
>10+ inches of snow expected for most of island


...MAJOR SNOWSTORM TO IMPACT TRI-STATE AREA OVERNIGHT AND MONDAY...

.LOW PRESSURE MOVING OFF THE CAROLINA COAST WILL TRACK
NORTHEAST...PASSING TO THE SOUTH AND EAST OF LONG ISLAND MONDAY
MORNING. THE LOW WILL THEN PROCEED UP INTO THE GULF OF MAINE BY
MONDAY EVENING. STRONG CANADIAN HIGH PRESSURE TO THE NORTH WILL
PROVIDE THE COLD AIR FOR A MAINLY SNOW EVENT...WITH SOME SLEET
MIXING IN LATE TONIGHT AND MONDAY MORNING OVER FAR SOUTHEASTERN
CONNECTICUT AND THE TWIN FORKS OF LONG ISLAND.

CTZ005>012-NJZ002>006-011-NYZ067>081-021030-
/O.CON.KOKX.WS.W.0004.000000T0000Z-090302T2300Z/
NORTHERN FAIRFIELD-NORTHERN NEW HAVEN-NORTHERN MIDDLESEX-
NORTHERN NEW LONDON-SOUTHERN FAIRFIELD-SOUTHERN NEW HAVEN-
SOUTHERN MIDDLESEX-SOUTHERN NEW LONDON-WESTERN PASSAIC-BERGEN-
EASTERN PASSAIC-ESSEX-HUDSON-UNION-ORANGE-PUTNAM-ROCKLAND-
NORTHERN WESTCHESTER-SOUTHERN WESTCHESTER-NEW YORK (MANHATTAN)-
BRONX-RICHMOND (STATEN ISLAND)-KINGS (BROOKLYN)-QUEENS-NASSAU-
NORTHWESTERN SUFFOLK-NORTHEASTERN SUFFOLK-SOUTHWESTERN SUFFOLK-
SOUTHEASTERN SUFFOLK-
909 PM EST SUN MAR 1 2009

...WINTER STORM WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 6 PM EST MONDAY...

A WINTER STORM WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 6 PM EST MONDAY.

A STEADY SNOW WILL BECOME HEAVY AT TIMES THROUGH THE OVERNIGHT AND
INTO MONDAY MORNING. THERE MAY BE ENOUGH WARM AIR ALOFT FOR SLEET
TO MIX IN ACROSS SOUTHEASTERN CONNECTICUT AND THE TWIN FORKS OF
LONG ISLAND AT THE HEIGHT OF THE STORM...BUT FOR THE MOST PART
THIS WILL BE AN ALL SNOW EVENT. THE SNOW WILL THEN TAPER OFF
MONDAY AFTERNOON.

TOTAL ACCUMULATIONS ARE EXPECTED TO RANGE FROM 4 TO 8 INCHES OVER
ORANGE AND WESTERN PASSAIC COUNTIES...TO 10 TO 14 INCHES ACROSS
CENTRAL LONG ISLAND AND SOUTH CENTRAL CONNECTICUT. SOMEWHAT LOWER
AMOUNTS ARE FORECAST ACROSS THE TWIN FORKS OF EASTERN LONG ISLAND
AND SOUTHEAST CONNECTICUT DUE TO THE SNOW POSSIBLY MIXING WITH
SLEET. FOR THE NEW YORK CITY METRO AREA...8 TO 12 INCHES OF
SNOWFALL IS EXPECTED.

SUSTAINED NORTH WINDS OF 15 TO 25 MPH WITH GUSTS OF 30 TO
OCCASIONALLY 35 MPH WILL RESULT IN BLOWING AND DRIFTING SNOW WITH
VISIBILITIES OF LESS THAN A QUARTER OF A MILE AT TIMES.

A WINTER STORM WARNING MEANS SIGNIFICANT AMOUNTS OF SNOW...
SLEET...AND ICE ARE EXPECTED OR OCCURRING. STRONG WINDS ARE ALSO
POSSIBLE. THIS WILL MAKE TRAVEL VERY HAZARDOUS OR IMPOSSIBLE.

STAY TUNED TO NOAA ALL HAZARDS WEATHER RADIO OR VISIT OUR WEB
SITE AT WEATHER.GOV/NYC FOR FURTHER DETAILS AND UPDATES.

$$

Sunday, March 1, 2009

2/2: No School for SCSD

Ahead of Monday's snow storm, the Smithtown Central School District has cancelled all classes and school activities for Monday, March 2, 2009.

The elementary school math assessment will be given Tuesday.

Stay with TheMatadorOnline.com for the latest and get live coverage on our sister site, SmithtownRadio.com.


A WINTER STORM WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 6 PM EST MONDAY.

A STEADY SNOW WILL OVERSPREAD THE TRI-STATE AREA FROM SOUTHWEST TO
NORTHEAST THIS EVENING. THE SNOW WILL BE HEAVY AT TIMES THROUGH
THE OVERNIGHT AND INTO MONDAY MORNING. THERE MAY BE ENOUGH WARM
AIR ALOFT FOR SLEET TO MIX IN ACROSS SOUTHEASTERN CONNECTICUT AND
THE TWIN FORKS OF LONG ISLAND AT THE HEIGHT OF THE STORM...BUT FOR
THE MOST PART THIS WILL BE AN ALL SNOW EVENT. THE SNOW WILL THEN
TAPER OFF MONDAY AFTERNOON.

TOTAL ACCUMULATIONS ARE EXPECTED TO RANGE FROM 4 TO 8 INCHES OVER
ORANGE AND WESTERN PASSAIC COUNTIES...TO 10 TO 14 INCHES ACROSS
CENTRAL LONG ISLAND AND SOUTH CENTRAL CONNECTICUT. SOMEWHAT LOWER
AMOUNTS ARE FORECAST ACROSS THE TWIN FORKS OF EASTERN LONG ISLAND
AND SOUTHEAST CONNECTICUT DUE TO THE SNOW POSSIBLY MIXING WITH
SLEET. FOR THE NEW YORK CITY METRO AREA...8 TO 12 INCHES OF
SNOWFALL IS EXPECTED.

SUSTAINED NORTH WINDS OF 15 TO 25 MPH WITH GUSTS OF 30 TO
OCCASIONALLY 35 MPH WILL RESULT IN BLOWING AND DRIFTING SNOW WITH
VISIBILITIES OF LESS THAN A QUARTER OF A MILE AT TIMES.

A WINTER STORM WARNING MEANS SIGNIFICANT AMOUNTS OF SNOW...
SLEET...AND ICE ARE EXPECTED OR OCCURRING. STRONG WINDS ARE ALSO
POSSIBLE. THIS WILL MAKE TRAVEL VERY HAZARDOUS OR IMPOSSIBLE.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

4 Inches of Snow Recorded in Smithtown

(SmithtownRadio.com) - Snow accumulations of an half inch per hour were seen during this time.

From over five inches in Mount Sinai to nearly two-and-a-half inches in Islip variety of snow totals were reportered islandwide:

TownSnow Accumulation (inches)TimeSource
MOUNT SINAI 5.2915 PMPUBLIC
NORTH BABYLON5.0815 PM PUBLIC
EAST SETAUKET4.3800 PMPUBLIC
CENTEREACH 4.2905 PMPUBLIC
CUTCHOGUE 4.0900 PM SKYWARN SPOTTER
LINDENHURST 4.0800 PMSKYWARN SPOTTER
SAYVILLE 4.0914 PMNWS EMPLOYEE
UPTON 3.9 700 PMNWS OFFICE
SMITHTOWN 3.7 900 PMSKYWARN SPOTTER
BAITING HOLLOW3.6700 PMPUBLIC
CENTERPORT 3.6930 PMSKYWARN SPOTTER
ORIENT 3.5600 PMPUBLIC
COPIAGUE 3.4736 PMSKYWARN SPOTTER
HOLBROOK 3.4923 PMPUBLIC
SOUTHAMPTON 3.2 702 PMPUBLIC
PATCHOGUE 2.5918 PMNWS EMPLOYEE
ISLIP2.4700 PMFAA CONTRACT OBSERVER

Banquet Forecast


(SmithtownRadio.com) - Megan Russ in the SmithtownRadio.com Weather Center is calling for a very cold evening Wednesday for the East Senior Banquet.
A low of 14 is forecasted with partly cloudy skies. The wind chill is going to drop to zero Wednesday evening.

Megan's forecast be can heard thirty minutes past any hour on http://www.smithtownradio.com/ or anytime on the Web site.

2/3: One Hour Early Dismissal


Monday, February 2, 2009

Snow Storm Expected Tues

(SmithtownRadio.com) - Despite tying a record high temperature of 52 degrees in Islip Monday, SmithtownRadio.com's Megan Russ is hard at work tracking an approaching snowstorm.

Light snow flurries are expected to across the island after midnight. Snow will gradually become steadier during the morning before turning to all snow Tuesday afternoon. While roadways will be wet for Tuesday morning’s commute, the heaviest of snow is expected during the Tuesday evening commute.

On average, about 3- to 4-inches of snow is expected by Tuesday evening.

You can hear Megan's forecast at thirty minutes past every hour on SmithtownRadio.com.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Icy Roads Remain

By Goodman, National Weather Service

TEMPERATURES REMAIN BELOW FREEZING THIS MORNING...AND WILL ONLYRISE TO 30 TO 35 THIS AFTERNOON BEFORE DROPPING BACK BELOWFREEZING TONIGHT. AS A RESULT...AREAS OF BLACK ICE THAT FORMEDLAST NIGHT WILL LIKELY REMAIN IN PLACE FOR MUCH OF TODAY AND INTOTONIGHT. SLICK SPOTS ON UNTREATED ROADS AND SURFACES ARELIKELY...SO ANYONE OUT WALKING OR DRIVING SHOULD EXERCISEAPPROPRIATE CAUTION AND ALLOW EXTRA TRAVEL TIME.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

1/15: Early Dismissal


1/15: 1 HR EARLY DISMISSAL

Breaking News:

SMITHTOWN SCHOOLS: ONE HOUR EARLY DISMISSAL / ALL AFTER-SCHOOL ACTIVITES AND EVENING ACTIVITIES CANCELED

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

SmithtownRadio.com Weather Center Alert

For those of you who like the winter chill and snow you're going to enjoy the next 72 hours - the rest of us will need to buddle up.

The National Weather Service has issued a Winter Weather Advisory, which is in effect until 1 pm Thursday.

A low pressure system approaching from the west is expected to bring us 2-3 inches of snow by Thursday evening.

Snow developing overnight Thursday should leave about 1 inch of the white stuff on the ground by about the time your kids are heading out to the bus stop Thursday morning.

Steady snow will continue into early afternoon with the heaviest of snow falling between 7 am and 11 am. This is expected to bring another 1-2 inches, bringing total snow accumulations to about 2-3 inches. The east end is expected to see higher snow accumulation. Gusty northwest winds are expected to develop during the early afternoon hours making traveling difficult due to decreased visibility. As well, road conditions will quickly become slippery at the onset of precipitation as very cold air is in place over the region and the snow is not expected to melt on contact with roadways.

In addition, these gusty northwest winds will also blast an artic air mass over the region. Sub zero wind chills expected both Thursday night and Friday. Frigid temperatures will grip the area right through Saturday and untreated roadways are expected to remain hazardous into the weekend. Be sure to use extra caution when driving.

For Thursday, a high of 22 is expected but will drop to 7 degrees Thursday night. A high of 19 is expected Friday, which will drop back into the single digits Friday night. Saturday a high of 19; a high of a 30 for Sunday. The wind chill will make it feel like the temperature is around zero.

You can get the latest forecast at the top and bottom of every hour on SmithtownRadio.com.

Friday, January 9, 2009

Winter Storm Warning

SmithtownRadio.com will have coverage of the storm all weekend long. The latest can be found on their Web site, and at the top and bottom of every hour on-air...

...WINTER STORM WARNING IN EFFECT FROM 11 AM SATURDAY TO 8 AM EST
SUNDAY...

THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN UPTON HAS ISSUED A WINTER STORM
WARNING FOR HEAVY SNOW...WHICH IS IN EFFECT FROM 11 AM SATURDAY TO 8
AM EST SUNDAY.

SNOW IS EXPECTED TO DEVELOP OVER NORTHEAST NEW JERSEY AND WESTERN
PORTIONS OF THE LOWER HUDSON VALLEY AROUND MIDDAY BEFORE
SPREADING FROM WEST TO EAST THROUGHOUT THE DAY. SNOW WILL THEN
CONTINUE TO FALL THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT AND BECOME HEAVY AT
TIMES. THE SNOW WILL TAPER OFF SHORTLY AFTER SUNRISE ON SUNDAY.

THE LOW WILL PASS CLOSE ENOUGH TO LONG ISLAND THAT THE SNOW WILL
MIX WITH SLEET AND POSSIBLY FREEZING RAIN LATE SATURDAY
NIGHT ACROSS NEW YORK CITY AND LONG ISLAND LOCATIONS...HELPING TO
LIMIT SNOW ACCUMULATIONS IN THESE AREAS.

TOTAL SNOW ACCUMULATIONS FROM THIS SYSTEM WILL RANGE FROM 6 TO
9 INCHES ACROSS THE LOWER HUDSON VALLEY AND INTERIOR
CONNECTICUT...AND FROM 5 TO 7 INCHES ACROSS NORTHERN NEW YORK
CITY...NASSAU AND NORTHERN SUFFOLK COUNTY...AND COASTAL PORTIONS
OF NORTHEAST NEW JERSEY.

A WINTER STORM WARNING MEANS SIGNIFICANT AMOUNTS OF SNOW...
SLEET...AND ICE ARE EXPECTED OR OCCURRING. STRONG WINDS ARE ALSO
POSSIBLE. THIS WILL MAKE TRAVEL VERY HAZARDOUS OR IMPOSSIBLE.

STAY TUNED TO NOAA ALL HAZARDS WEATHER RADIO OR VISIT OUR WEB
SITE AT WEATHER.GOV/NYC FOR FURTHER DETAILS AND UPDATES.