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- Posted February 04, 2014
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Volunteers needed to serve as lookouts for severe weather
The Oakland County Homeland Security Division recently announced its schedule of seven Skywarn spotter training classes which will commence on Monday, Feb. 24, and culminate on Monday, April 7.
"Everyone complains about the weather, but nobody ever does anything about it. As a Skywarn spotter you can have an impact on protecting human life and property by warning people in advance of approaching tornadoes or severe thunderstorms," said Oakland County Executive L. Brooks Patterson. "Despite all the sophisticated weather radar equipment, there is only one instrument can detect a tornado or funnel cloud with complete certainty--the human eye."
Skywarn training is open to fire, police, EMS technicians, security officers, volunteers and anyone with an interest in serving as the "eyes" for approaching severe weather. During the two hour classes, participants will learn the procedures for spotting and reporting tornadoes and strong storms with high winds and potentially damaging hail. Instruction will also encompass the basics of thunderstorm development, storm structure, what features to look for and where to find them.
For additional information on the free Skywarn classes, go to oakgov.com/homelandsecurity and click on the Skywarn logo to register or call 248-858-5300.
Published: Tue, Feb 4, 2014
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