Meteorologist Kathryn Prociv has worked for The Weather Channel for 5 years, after which she became a producer for NBC News, in charge of all the weather content airing across the network’s platforms. Renowned for her broadcast appearance on The Weather Channel, NBC, MSNBC, CNBC, and The Today Show, Crystal spearheads innovation in the predictive meteorology space, leveraging weather and climate modeling to enable risk mitigation and business growth. Crystal EggerĬrystal Egger is an award-winning meteorologist and the president of Monarch Weather, a consulting firm providing global weather & climate forecast and analysis services. We’re going to continue increasing over the next few weeks – so if there’s somebody we missed that you think we should add, let us know in the comments below! 1. To help you stay informed, we’ve put together some of our favorite voices in the weather and climate space, to help you know where to turn to for expert insights, commentary, and advice. Our Top Famous meteorologists & Weather Influencers to Follow A new IPCC report also has climate experts and famous meteorologists calling out for the world to take notice. “But, this gives us a chance to be proactive.This year we’ve seen extreme weather events – hurricanes, flooding, record-breaking heatwaves, and wildfires – cause chaos and devastation across the globe. “You always hope nothing’s going to happen,” he said. Not much going on in terms of backyard weather is A-OK with him. It was a moment that sobers him even though a dry spell is hovering over the Ohio Valley at present and Ivan said there hasn’t been a whole lot for the stations to monitor. He noted that a mere two weeks after that connection was made agency staffers were checking out readings from similar stations and could see in real time when 16 inches of rain hit Florida in a 24 hour period. “These are pretty sophisticated pieces of equipment.”Īlready, the stations are tapped into an online weather database called. “There are no moving parts,” but they monitor all the parameters the NWS needs and can tell the difference between driving rain and, say, an occasional bird resting atop part of the station. Ivan said the agency’s stations - which were purchased with a pot of funding associated with their response to an emergency at a gas and oil pad - are technological wonders. And, the NWS - to which all of the solar-powered units will continually report - can better understand what might be headed to nearby communities. Now, if a station at Colerain or Wolfhurst is getting deluged, Ivan said the agency has an idea of what streams need to be monitored and how quickly. “But, we don’t know what the actual rain amount is.” “We can sit here and look at radar,” Ivan said of the past. The county previously had some rain gauges, but the new stations are higher end and more broadly distributed, he noted. “One of the reasons we decided to go this route is we get hit with flash flooding.” “We’ve got them everywhere - from Yorkville to Powhatan,” Ivan said. They are located on buildings, telephone poles and at least one antennae tower - places he said they are able to tap into Wi-Fi. The last few of a dozen small weather stations purchased by the Belmont County Emergency Management Agency are set to go online in the next couple of weeks, according to agency Director Dave Ivan. While Borsuk said his station and general weather watchfulness are about being “an armchair meteorologist,” more of the same kind of monitoring is popping up all over the Ohio Valley in a roadblock and flashing-red-lights kind of way. He continues to report to a dedicated phone line at the NWS’s Pittsburgh office if he sees looming problems such as flood water creeping onto a road or a stream breaching its banks. The storm flooded numerous properties in the blocks around the family home. When a derecho hit Wheeling in 2017, Borsuk’s station recorded the 3 inches of rainfall that fell within 30 minutes and he reported that data to the NWS. That ongoing connection has been more than theoretical. He maintained his certification as a weather spotter, however. Maintaining a dedicated internet connection with data drops required every 15 minutes turned out to be more than he wanted to mess with as a teen. “I sort of came up with a game - how right the TV was compared to my backyard forecasting.”Īt one point, he said his station was linked with about 7,000 others worldwide to the NWS through the service’s Citizen Weather Observer Program. He realized he had enough backyard data - at least in theory - to forecast about 48 hours into the future.īorsuk was hooked. That activity turned into a bit of a quest for Borsuk, whose dad is a Ph.D.-level scientist for the U.S. “This all started when I was in Scouts,” said Borsuk, who rose to the rank of Eagle Scout.
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