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your way, during day or night, while you're awake or asleep, is with a NOAA
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Alachua County
SKYWARN
Watching the weather!
What is Alachua Co. SKYWARN?
Alachua County SKYWARN is an organized system of trained local
spotter volunteers operating under the NWS Severe Storm Reporting
Networks program. "The fundamental objective of Severe Storm Reporting
Networks is to provide timely and accurate reports of severe weather
in support of the National Weather Service (NWS) Severe Local Storm
Warning Program." (NWS Operations Manual, Part-B, Ch. 21, Para. 1)
Alachua County SKYWARN spotters report severe weather-related events occuring
within the county specifically to the Jacksonville Office (NWSO-JAX) of
the National Weather Service, as
well as to local Emergency Management,
helping both to provide better weather watch and warning services to the public.
(Counties in North Florida which are under the purview of the NWS-JAX
County Warning Area (CWA)
include: Alachua, Baker, Bradford, Clay, Columbia, Duval, Flagler, Gilchrist,
Hamilton, Marion, Nassau, Putnam, St. Johns, Suwannee, and Union.)
Alachua County SKYWARN plays host to both Basic and Advanced
NWS Spotter Training sessions, which we
try to offer on a repeating six-month basis (or as is convenient for the
NWS-JAX instructors). These classes are usually taught by
Angie Enyedi, Warning Coordination Meteorologist at NWS-JAX. When
sessions become scheduled they will appear in the
SKYWARN Class Schedule.
As it exists at this time, Alachua County SKYWARN consists of about
50-percent FCC-licensed amateur radio (``ham'') operators, and the rest
being non-ham civilians. We hope to expand our corps in the future
perhaps to include members of other services -- such as Citizens Band (CB)
operators, Family Radio Service (FRS) operators, and General Mobile Radio
Service (GMRS) operators. Though it gives you more capability, you don't
have to have a radio at all in order to participate. ANYONE
may participate in SKYWARN. All you need is a telephone, or a cell
phone, and a telephone number to reach either local Emergency Management
and/or NWS-JAX to make your report. And after you've successfully completed
a spotter training course with us, we'll give you some special, private
numbers reserved for just that purpose. To date, we've trained some 200+
people in at least BASIC weather spotting.
Alachua County SKYWARN's spotters includes people from:
It includes people from all walks of life: farmers, police and fire/rescue
workers, computer programmers, data entry operators, salesmen, teachers, students,
local reporters from the Gainesville Sun,
WUFT-TV NEWS 5, the Chief Meteorologist
at WCJB/TV-20, and even an ex-hurricane
hunter who used to fly aboard early Air Force hurricane hunter aircraft!
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