Mercer County Executive Brian M. Hughes announced the Mercer County Office of Emergency Management will host a Skywarn Storm Spotter training course on Wednesday, May 23 from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. at the Dempster Fire Academy located at 350 Lawrence Station Road in Lawrence.
This unique, free course, co-sponsored by the Mount Holly Forecast Office of the National Weather Service, will teach interested residents how they can be a significant help to first responders and other authorities during severe storms. Skywarn is a nationwide program run by the National Weather Service for the past 35 years in which trained residents gather real-time, ground-truth information about severe weather, which can be anything from a tornado to a flood or winter snowstorm.
Skywarn spotters stay close to home and are not storm chasers, an activity that is dangerous and not condoned by the National Weather Service. Spotters typically relay reports to the weather service about the severity and type of storm or weather event, indications of more dangerous conditions ahead and verification of forecasted weather, among other responsibilities.
According to Mercer County’s emergency management and the National Weather Service, these types of localized, up-to-date reports by residents can save lives and mitigate property damage because they can lead to new weather warnings, cancellation of unnecessary warnings, or detection of an impending event.
National Weather Service experts will instruct Skywarn volunteers on local weather patterns and threats, how to spot oncoming severe weather, and how to notify the National Weather Service and area emergency management.
Those who take the course are not required to become a Skywarn member after the class, but are encouraged to do so.
In an average year across the United States, Skywarn Storm Spotters assist in the identification, location and response to 10,000 thunderstorms, 5,000 floods and more than 1,000 tornadoes, according to the National Weather Service.
The Skywarn program is free, but registration is required. Register with the Mercer County Office of Emergency Management by e-mailing your full name, street address, phone number and e-mail address to draymond@mercercounty.org; or by faxing that information to (609) 799-7067; or by calling the office at (609) 799-8868. Attendees must be 17 or older and must bring at least one form of government-issued photo identification.
Please contact John Pugh, the Mercer County Skywarn coordinator, at wj3p@arrl.net if you have any questions. This information has also been posted at www.freewebs.com/mercerskywarn/announcements.htm.






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