hurricane tracking 2012
DESCRIPTION
Hurricane Tracking 2012TRANSCRIPT
1
Saturday, June 30, 2012
Rather cloudy, Heavy rain
Know w
hat a hurricane WATCH
and WARNING m
eans✔
WATCH
: Hurricane conditions
are possiblein the specified area
of the WATCH
, usually within
36 hours.
✔W
ARNING: H
urricane conditionsare expected
in the specified areaof the W
ARNING, usually w
ithin 24 hours.
Prepare a Personal Evacuation Plan✔
Identify ahead of time w
here youcould go if you are told to evacuate.Choose several places—
a friend’shom
e in another town, a m
otel, or a shelter.
✔Keep handy the telephone num
bersof these places as w
ell as a roadm
ap of your locality. You may need
to take alternative or unfamiliar
routes if major roads are closed
or clogged.
✔Listen to NOA
A W
eather Radio or local radio or TV stations forevacuation instructions. If advisedto evacuate,
do so imm
ediately.
Assemble a Disaster Supplies Kit
containing—✔
First aid kit and essential m
edications.
✔Canned food and can opener.
✔A
t least three gallons of water
per person.
✔Protective clothing, rainw
ear, and bedding or sleeping bags.
✔Battery-pow
ered radio, flashlight,and extra batteries.
✔Special item
s for infant, elderly, or disabled fam
ily mem
bers.
Identify what to do w
hen a hurricane W
ARNING is issued✔
Listen to the advice of local officials, and leave if they tell you to do so.
✔Com
plete preparation activities.
✔If you are not advised to evacuate,stay indoors, aw
ay from w
indows.
✔Be aw
are that the calm “eye” is
deceptive; the storm is not over.
The worst part of the storm
will
happen once the eye passes overand the w
inds blow from
theopposite direction. Trees, shrubs,buildings, and other objects dam
aged by the first winds can
be broken or destroyed by the second w
inds.
✔Be alert for tornadoes. Tornadoescan happen during a hurricaneand after it passes over. Rem
ainindoors, in the center of yourhom
e, in a closet or bathroomw
ithout window
s.
✔Stay aw
ay from flood w
aters. Ifyou com
e upon a flooded road,turn around and go another w
ay.If you are caught on a floodedroad and w
aters are rising rapidlyaround you, get out of the car and clim
b to higher ground.
Know w
hat to do after a hurricane is over✔
Keep listening to NOAA
Weather
Radio or local radio or TV stationsfor instructions.
✔If you are evacuated, return hom
ew
hen local officials tell you it issafe to do so.
✔Inspect your hom
e for damage.
✔U
se flashlights at all times; avoid
using candles.
Your local contact is:
Are You Ready for a H
urricane?Here’s w
hat you can do to prepare for such an emergency
Hurricane
✔W
ritten instructions on how to
turn off electricity, gas, andw
ater if authorities advise you todo so. (Rem
ember, you’ll need a
professional to turn natural gasservice back on.)
Prepare for high winds
✔Install hurricane shutters or purchase precut 1/
2” outdoor plyw
ood boards for each window
of your home. Install anchors for
the plywood and predrill holes in
the plywood so that you can put
it up quickly.
✔M
ake trees more w
ind resistantby rem
oving diseased and damaged
limbs, then strategically rem
ovingbranches so that w
ind can blowthrough.
Know w
hat to do when a
hurricane WATCH is issued
✔Listen to NOA
A W
eather Radio orlocal radio or TV stations for up-to-date storm
information.
✔Prepare to bring inside any law
nfurniture, outdoor decorations or ornam
ents, trash cans, hangingplants, and anything else thatcan be picked up by the w
ind.
✔Prepare to cover allw
indows of
your home. If shutters have not
been installed, use precut plywood
as described above. Note:Tape
does not prevent window
s frombreaking, so taping w
indows is
not recomm
ended.
✔Fill your car’s gas tank.
✔Recheck m
anufactured home
tie-downs.
✔Check batteries and stock up oncanned food, first aid supplies,drinking w
ater, and medications.
Stock No. NOAA PA 94053orARC 4454Rev. July 1998
2
Are You Ready for a Hurricane?Here’s what you can do to prepare for such an emergency
Know what a hurricane watch and warninG means
• WATCH: Hurricane conditions are possible in the specified area of the WATCH, usually within 36 hours.
• WARNING: Hurricane conditions are expected in the specified area of the WARNING, usually within 24 hours.
PrePare a Personalevacuation Plan
• Identify ahead of time where you could go if you are told to evacuate. Choose several places—a friend’s home in another town, a motel, or a shelter.
• Keep handy the telephone numbers of these places as well as a road map of your locality.You may need to take alternative or unfamiliar routes if major roads are closed or clogged.
• Listen to NOAA Weather Radio or local radio or TV stations for evacuation instructions. If advised to evacuate, do so immediately.
assemble a disaster suPPlies Kit containinG
• First aid kit and essentialmedications.• Canned food and can opener.• At least three gallons of water per
person.• Protective clothing, rainwear, and
bedding or sleeping bags.• Battery-powered radio, flashlight,
and extra batteries.• Special items for infant, elderly, or
disabled family members. • Written instructions on how to turn
off electricity, gas, and water if authori-ties advise you to do so. (Remember, you’ll need a professional to turn natural gas service back on.)
PrePare for hiGh winds• Install hurricane shutters or pur-
chase precut 1/2” outdoor plywood boards for each window of your home. Install anchors for the plywood and predrill holes in the plywood so that you can put it up quickly.
• Make trees more wind resistant by removing diseased and damaged limbs, then strategically removing branches so that wind can blow through.
Know what to do when ahurricane watch is issued
• Listen to NOAA Weather Radio or local radio or TV stations for up-to-date storm information.
• Prepare to bring inside any lawn furniture, outdoor decorations or orna-ments, trash cans, hanging plants, and anything else that can be picked up by the wind.
• Prepare to cover all windows of your home. If shutters have not been installed, use precut plywood as described above. Note: Tape does not prevent windows from breaking, so taping windows is not recommended.
• Fill your car’s gas tank.• Recheck manufactured home tie-
downs.• Check batteries and stock up on
canned food, first aid supplies, drinking water, and medications.
identify what to do when a hurricane warninG is issued
• Listen to the advice of localofficials, and leave if they tell you to do so.
• Complete preparation activities.• If you are not advised to evacuate,
stay indoors, away from windows.• Be aware that the calm “eye” is
deceptive; the storm is not over. The worst part of the storm will happen once the eye passes over and the winds blow from the opposite direction. Trees, shrubs, buildings, and other objects damaged by the first winds can be broken or destroyed by the second winds.
Saturday, June 30, 2012 wilsontimes.com 2
• Be alert for tornadoes. Tornadoes can happen during a hurricane and after it passes over. Remain indoors, in the center of your home, in a closet or bathroom without windows.
• Stay away from flood waters. If you come upon a flooded road, turn around and go another way. If you are caught on a flooded road and waters are rising rapidly around you, get out of the car and climb to higher ground.
Know what to do after ahurricane is over
• Keep listening to NOAA Weather Radio or local radio or TV stations for instructions.
• If you are evacuated, return home when local officials tell you it is safe to do so.
• Inspect your home for damage.• Use flashlights at all times; avoid
using candles.
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Saturday, June 30, 2012 wilsontimes.com 3
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Mass Care Support TrailerThe MCST is primarily utilized by WCEM in emergency situations to assist Wilson Coun-ty’s elderly citizens. The trailer is stocked with various supplies, including: wheelchairs, walkers, cots and ramps, among other provisions.
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Hurricanes are most threatening to residents along our nation’s coast-lines. But such fierce storms also have been known to build up enough momentum to carry their destructive winds inland for hundreds of miles. Heavy rains, flooding, and tornadoes add to the damage hurricanes can inflict on your home and community.
Prepare for a hurricane by complet-ing each item on the checklist below. Then meet to discuss and finalize your Family Disaster Plan:
Put together a Disaster Sup-plies Kit in a clearly labeled, easy-to-grab container.
Location of Disaster Supplies Kit: _________________________________________________________________
Call your local emergency management or planning and zon-ing office to find out if you live in an area that could flood during a hurricane or heavy rains.
Flood area: Yes No
Prepare an evacuation plan in case you must leave. Share your plan with the relatives or friends you plan to stay with—or plan to go to a Red Cross shelter. Add to your Disaster Supplies Kit a map marked with two alternative routes to your destination.
Evacuation plan completed: ___
__________________________________________________________________
Write instructions on how to turn off your home’s electricity, water, and gas if advised to do so by local authorities. (A professional must turn gas service back on.)
Instructions written: ___________________________________________________________________________
Make a list of items to bring inside in the event of a storm. Keep this list in your Disaster Supplies Kit.
List completed: ________________________________________________________________________________
Buy any items needed to board up windows and protect your home well ahead of time. Precut plywood to fit windows so that you can quickly cover windows.
Items purchased to protect home: ______________________________________________
Have an engineer check your home and advise you about ways to make it more resistant to hur-ricane winds.
Engineer checked home: ______________________________________________________
Changes recommended: ______________________________________
And remember ... when a hurricane, earth-quake, flood, tornado, or other emergency happens in your community, you can count on your local American Red Cross chapter to be there to help you and your family.
Your Red Cross is not a government agency and depends on contributions of your time, money, and blood.
For more information, contact:Wilson County Emergency Management ( www.wilson-co.com / 252-399-2830) or the local Red Cross chapter, or the National Weather Service office.
You can also visit these Web sites:American Red Cross: www.redcross.org National Weather Service: www.nws.noaa.govFederal Emergency Management Agency: www.fema.gov
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Saturday, June 30, 2012 wilsontimes.com 4
Are You Ready for a Hurricane?
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Your local contact is:
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Terms to know during hurricane season
Advisory: Official information issued by
tropical cyclone warning centers de-scribing all tropical cyclone watches and warnings in effect along with details concerning tropical cyclone locations, intensity and movement, and precautions that should be taken. Advisories are also issued to describe: (a) tropical cyclones prior to issuance of watches and warnings and (b) subtropical cyclones.
Best Track: A subjectively-smoothed represen-
tation of a tropical cyclone’s location and intensity over its lifetime. The best track contains the cyclone’s latitude, longitude, maximum sustained surface winds, and minimum sea-level pressure at 6-hourly intervals. Best track posi-tions and intensities, which are based on a post-storm assessment of all available data, may differ from values contained in storm advisories. They also gener-ally will not reflect the erratic motion implied by connecting individual center fix positions.
Center: Generally speaking, the vertical axis of
a tropical cyclone, usually defined by the location of minimum wind or minimum pressure. The cyclone center position can vary with altitude. In advisory products, refers to the center position at the surface.
Cyclone: An atmospheric closed circulation
rotating counter-clockwise in the North-ern Hemisphere and clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere.
Eye: The roughly circular area of com-
paratively light winds that encompasses the center of a severe tropical cyclone. The eye is either completely or partially surrounded by the eyewall cloud.
Gale Warning: A warning of 1-minute sustained sur-
face winds in the range 34 kt (39 mph or
63 km/hr) to 47 kt (54 mph or 87 km/hr) inclusive, either predicted or occurring and not directly associated with tropical cyclones.
High Wind Warning: A high wind warning is defined as
1-minute average surface winds of 35 kt (40 mph or 64 km/hr) or greater lasting for 1 hour or longer, or winds gusting to 50 kt (58 mph or 93 km/hr) or greater regardless of duration that are either expected or observed over land.
Hurricane / Typhoon: A tropical cyclone in which the maxi-
mum sustained surface wind (using the U.S. 1-minute average) is 64 kt (74 mph or 119 km/hr) or more. The term hur-ricane is used for Northern Hemisphere tropical cyclones east of the International Dateline to the Greenwich Meridian. The term typhoon is used for Pacific tropical cyclones north of the Equator west of the International Dateline.
Hurricane Season: The portion of the year having a rela-
tively high incidence of hurricanes. The hurricane season in the Atlantic, Carib-bean, and Gulf of Mexico runs from June 1 to November 30. The hurricane season in the Eastern Pacific basin runs from May 15 to November 30. The hurricane season in the Central Pacific basin runs
Saturday, June 30, 2012 wilsontimes.com 5
Continued on page 8
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Hurricane Warning:
An announcement that hurri-cane conditions (sustained winds of 74 mph or higher) are expected somewhere within the specified coastal area.
Because hurricane prepared-ness activities become difficult once winds reach tropical storm force, the hurricane warning is issued 36 hours in advance of the anticipated onset of tropical-storm-force winds.
Hurricane Watch: An announcement that hurri-
cane conditions (sustained winds of 74 mph or higher) are possible within the specified coastal area.
Because hurricane preparedness activities become difficult once winds reach tropical storm force, the hurricane watch is issued 48 hours in advance of the antici-pated onset of tropical-storm-force winds.
Landfall: The intersection of the surface
center of a tropical cyclone with a coastline.
Because the strongest winds in a tropical cyclone are not located precisely at the center, it is possible for a cyclone’s strongest winds to be experienced over land even if landfall does not occur. Similarly, it is possible for a tropical cyclone to make landfall and have its stron-
gest winds remain over the water.
Major Hurricane: A tropical cyclone with maxi-
mum sustained winds of 111 mph (96 knots) or higher, corresponding to a Category 3, 4 or 5 on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale.
Storm Surge: An abnormal rise in sea level
accompanying a hurricane or other intense storm, and whose height is the difference between the ob-served level of the sea surface and the level that would have occurred in the absence of the cyclone.
Storm surge is usually estimated by subtracting the normal or astro-nomic high tide from the observed storm tide.
Storm Tide The water level rise during a
storm due to the combination of storm surge and the astronomi-cal tide.
Tropical DepressionA tropical cyclone with maxi-
mum sustained winds of 38 mph (33 knots) or less.
Tropical Storm A tropical cyclone with maxi-
mum sustained winds of 39 to 73 mph (34 to 63 knots).
Courtesy of The National Weather Service
Saturday, June 30, 2012 wilsontimes.com 8
TermsContinued from page 5
Photos of Hurricane Floyd damage in Wilson County. Times archive photos
of Wilson/Nashville
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Saturday, June 30, 2012 wilsontimes.com 9
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What is Wilson County Emergency Management?Wilson County Emergency Management serves the citizens of Wilson County by
taking the lead coordination role during major emergency and disaster situations. They coordinate resources on the local and state level to bring to bare on the hazards that may affect the citizens of Wilson County.
During major disaster situations, Wilson County Emergency Management staff work in the County Emergency Operations Center to direct other County agencies while we shelter and feed citizens, gather damage assessment information, and compile that information to work towards various disaster declarations. At times, they are tasked with making unpopular decisions that will affect the safety and well being of citizens.
They also respond to hazardous materials spills, large fires, and any unusual emer-gency event that occurs in the County. Their role is to obtain and provide specialized resources such as Hazardous Materials Clean-up Teams, Hazardous Materials Re-sponse Teams, Specialized Search and Rescue Resources, and any other specialized resource that may be needed on an incident.
Within the last year, Wilson County Emergency Management has been providing timely training on Terrorism Preparedness for emergency response agencies and the general public. If you have any specific questions, please call the office at 252-399-2830. Office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.
Courtesy of Wilson County Emergency Management
Gordon W. Deno, Coordinator 252-399-2830
Rodney Dancy, Preparedness Coordinator 252-265-5554
www.wilson-co.com
Saturday, June 30, 2012 wilsontimes.com 12
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Saturday, June 30, 2012 wilsontimes.com 13
Flood Insurance Homeowners policies do not cover damage
caused by a flood. A flood policy must be in force in order to cover flood damage. It takes 30 days after purchase for a flood policy to take effect, so it’s important to buy flood insurance before floodwaters start to rise. Your home has a 26% chance of being damaged by a flood during the course of a 30-year mortgage, compared to a 9% chance of fire damage. Anyone can buy flood coverage as long as your community participates in the National Flood Insurance Program.
Homeowners Insurance
Most homeowners policies will cover fire or lightning, vandalism, windstorm or hail, explo-sion, riot or civil commotion, impact by aircraft or vehicle, smoke, theft, weight of ice, snow, sleet, accidental water discharge from plumbing or appliances, sudden tearing/bulging of heat-
ing or cooling systems, freezing of plumbing system, and breakage of glass, for your home and personal property. Check with your insur-ance agent to verify the named perils that your policy protects against.
Back-up oF sewer and draIn
Each year, sewer and drain backups cause mil-lions of dollars in damage to the homes owned by policyholders. Most homeowners policies do not cover losses incurred from sewer or drain backup. (A homeowners endorsement offering some limited coverage may be available through your agent).
For information about hurricane preparedness, please visit:
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Get your insuranceWhat you might not know about disaster coverage
Photo by Keith Barnes | Times archive
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Saturday, June 30, 2012 wilsontimes.com 14
Shelter from the storm
Wilson County Emergency Management is there to provide shelter to those in need during an emergency situation. While the location and number of shelters may vary, depending on the location of the emergency and number of certified personnel available for staffing, their primary locations are:
• Forest Hills Middle School, 1210 NW Forest Hills Road• Darden Middle School, 1665 Lipscomb Road (overflow from
Darden would direct to B.O. Barnes Elementary School, 1913 Martin L. King Parkway)
In the event a shelter is opened, the WCEM will also open an animal shelter. Because of tornado damage to the former location at the Wilson County Rescue Squad building (animals are not allowed at the primary shelters), WCEM is currently working on an alternate location. Any citizens seeking to board their animal at the shelter:
• Must show proof of rabies vaccination or the animal will not be permitted
• Are highly encouraged to bring their own crate for their pet due to limited supplies and behavioral concerns for the pet
• May not drop off their pet at the shelter and leave. All owners must stay at the shelter with their pet.
The Wilson Rescue Squad building is located at 1902 South Tarboro Street. Times
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Atlantic Basin Hurricane Tracking Chart
45ºN
40ºN
35ºN
30ºN
25ºN
20ºN
15ºN
105ºW 100ºW 95ºW 90ºW 85ºW 80ºW 75ºW 70ºW 65ºW 60ºW 55ºW 50ºW 45ºW 40ºW
105ºW 100ºW 95ºW 90ºW 85ºW 80ºW 75ºW 70ºW 65ºW 60ºW 55ºW 50ºW 45ºW 40ºW
Alberto | Beryl | Chris | Debby | ErnestoFlorence | Gordon | Helene | Isaac | Joyce Kirk | Leslie | Michael | Nadine | Oscar Patty | Rafael | Sandy | Tony | Valerie | William
National Hurricane Center, Miami, Florida
Courtesy of:
Also available at:WILSONTIMES.COM
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