[STORMREPORTS] USASitRep: For November 23, 2000

From: owner-sitrep{at}disastercenter.com
Date: Thu Nov 23 2000 - 11:42:41 EST


The USA Disaster Situation Report
The Daily USA Disaster Situation Report

For November 23, 2000
Christopher Effgen, Editor, host{at}disastercenter.com
------------------------------------------------------------
IN THIS ISSUE
------------------------------------------------------------
=> USA Daily Temperature Extremes
=> Special Notes
=> Current Tropical Weather Outlook
=> Current Active National Weather Service Warnings:
=> Severe Weather Probability Forecast
=> Precipitation Forecast, Excessive Rainfall, Heavy Snow And/Or Significant
Icing Forecast
=> USA Flood Report
=> USA Fire Report and Forecast
=> USA Earthquake Report
=> Yesterday's USA Severe Weather Reports
=> Guest Column-
=> Sponsored by the SandbaggerTM
**** ARTICLES ****
=> Article National Drought Summary -- November 21, 2000
=> Article Section 1. State And Local Enforcement Of Federal Communications
Commission Regulations On Use Of Citizens Band Radio Equipment.
=> Article Sifting Through the Ashes at Fire Conference 2000:
=> Article U.S. Transportation Secretary Slater Announces Plan For Improving
Child
Restraint Systems
=> Classified Ads
=> Links Area
=> How to Be Featured as our Guest Columnist
------------------------------------------------------------
Sponsored by the THE ROTHSTEIN CATALOG ON DISASTER RECOVERY
http://www.disastercenter.com/Rothstein/
------------------------------------------------------------
=> Subscribe/Unsubscribe information

   The Daily USA Disaster Situation Report

For November 23, 2000
Christopher Effgen, Editor, host{at}disastercenter.com
------------------------------------------------------------
IN THIS ISSUE
------------------------------------------------------------
   => USA Daily Temperature Extremes

National Temperature Extremes
High Wed...80 At San Bernardino CA
Low Thu...11 Below Zero At West Yellowstone MT

   => Special Notes

   => Current Tropical Weather Outlook For The North Atlantic Caribbean Sea
And
The Gulf Of Mexico

An area of disturbed weather has formed several hundred miles east of the
lesser antilles. Upper
level winds are not currently favorable for further development.

   => Current Active National Weather Service Warnings:

Active Warnings:
Updated Thu Nov 23 11:32:24 2000

Special Marine

Alaska
A STRONG STORM WITH 45 TO 60 KNOT SOUTHEAST WINDS IS MOVING INTO
THE EXTREME SOUTHEAST PORTION OF AREA 1B...CORDOVA BAY...AND
CLARENCE STRAIT SOUTH OF ANNETTE ISLAND. AREA BUOYS WERE REPORTING
SEAS OF 12 TO 26 FEET.

Non Precipitation

Texas
HIGH WIND WARNING FOR GUADALUPE PASS TODAY...

Winter Storm

New Mexico
A WHITE THANKSGIVING EXPECTED FOR PARTS OF WESTERN AND
   CENTRAL NEW MEXICO

New York
LAKE EFFECT SNOW ADVISORY FOR ONONDAGA AND MADISON COUNTIES
CONTINUES THIS AFTERNOON INCLUDING THE CITIES OF OSWEGO NY

Oregon
Washington
A WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY IS IN EFFECT TODAY FOR THE WESTERN
COLUMBIA RIVER GORGE. FREEZING RAIN AND RAIN ARE EXPECTED TO BEGIN
THIS MORNING AND CONTINUE THROUGH MUCH OF THE DAY
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY TODAY NEAR THE CASCADE CREST AND PASSES
   AND IN PROTECTED CASCADE VALLEYS
LIGHT FREEZING RAIN AND SNOW ARE LIKELY FOR PARTS OF EAST OREGON
AND SOUTHEAST WASHINGTON THANKSGIVING DAY

Vermont
SNOW SQUALLS WILL CONTINUE TO DIMINISH ACROSS EASTERN NEW YORK
AND WESTERN NEW ENGLAND

   => Severe Weather Probability Forecast

The forecast probability of an event is by the stated percentage or greater
for the event, within 25 miles of any point for the area described.

   Tornado Risk - Slight
There is a 2% probability of a tornado from central to southeast Texas and
southern Louisiana.
The 5% probability area covers central to eastern inland and coastal areas
of Texas and far southern
Louisiana.

   Hail Risk - Slight
There is a 5% probability of hail 3/4 inch or larger over the central and
east central 1/4 of Texas.
The 15% probability area covers central Texas.

   Wind Risk - Slight
There is a 5% probability of winds in excess of 50 knots over the east
southeast area of Texas
Louisiana, and southeast Mississippi.
The 15% probability area covers far east southeast Texas, and the southwest
1/2 of Louisiana.

   Tomorrow's Risk - Moderate
There is a 5% probability of any severe weather tomorrow over Louisiana, the
south southwest 1/3
of Mississippi, south southwest Alabama, and Florida's panhandle.
The 15% probability area covers Louisiana except the northern area, south
southwest Mississippi,
far south southwest Alabama, and the western area of Florida's panhandle.
The 25% probability area covers the southeast 1/2 of Louisiana.
Favorable for supercells and tornadoes...but the linear forcing and mid
level lapse rates suggests that
wind damage will be the main severe threat. Isolated tornadoes ...however

   => Precipitation Forecast, Excessive Rainfall, Heavy Snow And/Or
Significant
Icing Forecast

Precipitation Forecast
The 24 hour precipitation forecast is calling for over 3 inches of rainfall
over a small area of east
southeast Texas.
2 inches of rainfall is forecast over eastern Texas, the southeast 1/3 of
Arkansas, and central west to
northwest Louisiana.
1 inch of rainfall is forecast over isolated coastal areas of Washington and
Oregon, central north, and
eastern areas of Texas, central and southern Oklahoma, Arkansas except the
far northern area,
Louisiana except the southeastern area and far southwest Mississippi.

The 24 - 48 hour precipitation forecast is calling for over 2 inches of
rainfall over a small portion of
east northeast Louisiana, and southeast Mississippi.
1 inches of rainfall is forecast over southeast and eastern areas of
Louisiana, central to southeast
Arkansas, Mississippi except the northeast area, southwest Mississippi, the
western area of Florida's
panhandle.

Excessive Rainfall Forecast
Rainfall is expected to exceed flash flood values over east southeast Texas,
and southeast Louisiana.
Rainfall is expected to exceed flash flood values over isolated areas of
eastern Texas, far southeast
Oklahoma, far central west to far southwest Arkansas, and western Louisiana.

USA heavy snow and/or significant icing
The probability of heavy snow is low over is less than 20 percent
The moderate probability area is over
The probability of significant icing is less than 20 percent.

Tomorrow the probability of heavy snow is low over is less than 20 percent
The moderate probability area is over
The probability of significant icing is less than 20 percent.

   => USA Flood Report

The United States Flood Summary is not available.

   => USA Fire Report and Forecast

USA Fire Report and Forecast has not been updated since FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17,
2000

   => USA Earthquake Report

UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
NATIONAL EARTHQUAKE INFORMATION CENTER
GOLDEN, COLORADO
LISTS OF U.S. EARTHQUAKES IN THE LAST 30 HOURS
Prepared by USGS/NEIC 2000 NOV 23 at 00:15 UTC

EARTHQUAKES IN SOUTHWESTERN UNITED STATES
(29.0 TO 35.8 N, 102.0 TO 125.0 W)
Date Time (UTC) Lat Long Depth Magnitude
2000 NOV 22 13:07:47.00 34.1 N 116.8 W 0 km 2.8
10 miles NE of Banning, California

EARTHQUAKES IN WEST CENTRAL UNITED STATES
(35.8 TO 40.3 N, 102.0 TO 125.0 W)
Date Time (UTC) Lat Long Depth Magnitude
2000 NOV 22 03:10:15.00 39.8 N 122.8 W 0 km 3.0
45 miles SW of Red Bluff, California
2000 NOV 21 20:39:41.00 36.5 N 116.2 W 6 km 3.4
25 miles NW of Pahrump, Nevada

EARTHQUAKES IN STATE OF ALASKA
Date Time (UTC) Lat Long Depth Magnitude
2000 NOV 21 19:04:28.00 64.5 N 157.8 W 10 km 3.9
70 miles WSW of Ruby, Alaska
2000 NOV 21 20:40:03.06 51.4 N 175.9 W 33 km 5.2
45 miles SE of Adak, Alaska

   => Yesterday's USA Severe Weather Reports

Note: All data is considered preliminary
Tornado Reports
No reports received
Hail Reports
No reports received
Wind Reports
No reports received
Fields marked UNK are unknown
All Times UTC
Wind Gusts in MPH
Hail Sizes in 1/100 of an Inch (75 = 0.75")

   => Guest Column

------------------------------------------------------------
SPONSORSHIP NOTICE

THE ROTHSTEIN CATALOG ON DISASTER RECOVERY
The Rothstein Catalog On Disaster Recovery is the largest on line source of

Business Continuity, Disaster Recovery, IT Disaster Recovey, Software,
CD/Diskette Products,
Videos, Management Issues, Exercising Contingency Plans, Telecommunications,
Networks, Call
Centers, Help Desks, Crisis Management, Crisis Communications, Risk
Management, Business
Impact, Disaster Prevention, Avoidance Info, Network Security, Info
Protection, Service Levels,
Service Quality, Natural Hazards -- Earthquakes, Hurricanes.... Business
Records, Libraries,
Media, Banking, Finance, Govt Regs/Guidelines, Emergency Management,
Industrial, Terrorism,
Workplace Violence, Crime, Physical, Financial Security, and other Valuable
Resources, Tools.
http://www.disastercenter.com/Rothstein/.
--------------------------------------------------------------
**** ARTICLES ****
--------------------------------------------------------------

   => National Drought Summary -- November 21, 2000

The South: Heavy precipitation continued to benefit pastures and winter
grains, ease or eliminate the
wildfire threat, and dent long-term precipitation deficits. In some areas of
the South, however, large
rainfall deficits have accumulated since 1998, leaving hydrological drought
a major concern in many
areas. In particular, an area of severe drought (D2) persists across western
Texas, while several
areas of severe to extreme drought (D2 to D3) linger in areas from the lower
Mississippi Valley to
the southern Appalachians and adjacent piedmont areas. Weekly rainfall
totaled 2 inches or more
from easternmost Texas to Alabama, with slightly lower amounts noted across
Georgia and the
Carolinas. Four inches or more soaked the central Gulf Coast region, with
locally as much as 12
inches measured in southeastern Louisiana. Rainfall largely bypassed
Peninsular Florida, however,
resulting in further intensification of drought that has reached extreme
(D3) proportions in
west-central parts of the state.

A few specifics: Although November 1-20 rainfall in Louisiana reached 9.98
inches in Baton Rouge
and 10.58 inches in New Orleans, year-to-date totals remained 19.09 and
19.38 inches below
normal, respectively. Meanwhile in western Florida, Pensacola's January 1 -
November 20 deficit
stood at 21.11 inches, despite more than 4 inches of rain in November. In
Greenville-Spartanburg,
South Carolina, precipitation was 0.31 inch above normal during the first 20
days of November,
following a 38.48-inch deficit during the previous 30 months (May 1998 -
October 2000). Low
streamflows continue to represent a good measure of the long-term,
hydrological nature of the
drought, especially in the southern Appalachians.

The Plains, Midwestern, and Great Lakes States: Widespread, generally light
snow fell across the
northern Plains and upper Midwest. Liquid equivalent precipitation
approached 1 inch in the upper
Mississippi Valley, allowing the removal of a small abnormally dry (D0)
area. Meanwhile,
widespread precipitation (1 to 2 inches) soaked abnormally dry and
first-stage drought areas (D0 to
D1) in northern Michigan, bringing some reduction in drought severity and
leaving hydrological issues
as the only concern. Across the remainder of the Plains and Midwest, a cold,
dry pattern brought
little change in the overall drought situation, which remains most
significant in areas centered on
eastern Nebraska and western Iowa (D1 to D2), and northern and central
Montana (D1 to D3).

The West: The first 7 weeks of the water year featured significant, dryness-
and
drought-easing/ending precipitation across the Intermountain West.
Particularly heavy precipitation
was noted in the Four Corners States. As of November 20, high-elevation snow
pack (SNOTEL)
data from USDA's automated sensors indicated that season-to-date
precipitation in the West was
well above normal, except in California, the Northwest, and the northern
Rockies. Reservoirs in
California and the Northwest remain generally well stocked, however, due to
heavy precipitation in
previous years. For example, seasonal precipitation in the Sierra Nevada
averaged near to above
normal for the previous six water years (1994-95 to 1999-2000). In the
northern Rockies, however,
abnormally dry conditions (D0) remain a concern in many areas.

Hawaii: Heavy seasonal rains returned to some windward locations, but
long-term moisture deficits
persisted in leeward areas of the central and eastern islands. As a result,
abnormally dry (D0) and
first-stage drought (D1) conditions remained intact from Molokai, Lanai, and
western Maui to
western portions of the Big Island.

Prognosis: Weather features during the next 10 days that may affect some of
the nation's dry or
drought areas include: 1) The latest in a series of storm systems will
approach the South after
mid-week, sparking renewed rainfall in eastern Texas by Thanksgiving Day and
across much of the
remainder of the region thereafter. A second storm is forecast to closely
trail the first across the
South; 2) Snow showers are likely during the next several days in the Great
Lakes region, including
northern Michigan; 3) Milder weather across the northern Rockies and
northern Plains may induce
some snow melt at lower elevations and allow previously dry soils to absorb
much-needed moisture.

   => Section 1. State And Local Enforcement Of Federal Communications
Commission
Regulations On Use Of Citizens Band Radio Equipment.

Section 302 of the Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. 302a) is amended by
adding at the end
the following:
`(f)(1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), a State or local government may
enact a statute or
ordinance that prohibits a violation of the following regulations of the
Commission under this section:

`(A) A regulation that prohibits a use of citizens band radio equipment not
authorized by the
Commission.

`(B) A regulation that prohibits the unauthorized operation of citizens band
radio equipment on a
frequency between 24 MHz and 35 MHz.
`(2) A station that is licensed by the Commission pursuant to section 301 in
any radio service for the
operation at issue shall not be subject to action by a State or local
government under this subsection.
A State or local government statute or ordinance enacted for purposes of
this subsection shall
identify the exemption available under this paragraph.
`(3) The Commission shall, to the extent practicable, provide technical
guidance to State and local
governments regarding the detection and determination of violations of the
regulations specified in
paragraph (1).
`(4)(A) In addition to any other remedy authorized by law, a person affected
by the decision of a
State or local government agency enforcing a statute or ordinance under
paragraph (1) may submit
to the Commission an appeal of the decision on the grounds that the State or
local government, as
the case may be, enacted a statute or ordinance outside the authority
provided in this subsection.
`(B) A person shall submit an appeal on a decision of a State or local
government agency to the
Commission under this paragraph, if at all, not later than 30 days after the
date on which the decision
by the State or local government agency becomes final, but prior to seeking
judicial review of such
decision.
`(C) The Commission shall make a determination on an appeal submitted under
subparagraph (B)
not later than 180 days after its submittal.
`(D) If the Commission determines under subparagraph (C) that a State or
local government agency
has acted outside its authority in enforcing a statute or ordinance, the
Commission shall preempt the
decision enforcing the statute or ordinance.
`(5) The enforcement of statute or ordinance that prohibits a violation of a
regulation by a State or
local government under paragraph (1) in a particular case shall not preclude
the Commission from
enforcing the regulation in that case concurrently.
`(6) Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to diminish or otherwise
affect the jurisdiction of
the Commission under this section over devices capable of interfering with
radio communications.
`(7) The enforcement of a statute or ordinance by a State or local
government under paragraph (1)
with regard to citizens band radio equipment on board a `commercial motor
vehicle', as defined in
section 31101 of title 49, United States Code, shall require probable cause
to find that the
commercial motor vehicle or the individual operating the vehicle is in
violation of the regulations
described in paragraph (1).'.
on the president's desk, awaiting his signature

   => Sifting Through the Ashes at Fire Conference 2000:

The First National Conference on Fire Ecology, Prevention, and Management

When: November 27-December 1, 2000

Where: Town and Country Resort and Convention Center, San Diego, California
(specific
directions at bottom of media advisory). For Logistical Information, please
call Sandra Cooper at
or see such information at
http://www.ice.ucdavis.edu/cafe/docs/fire_booklet.pdf Registration for
reporters is free.

What: Reporters are invited to attend the first national conference on fire
ecology, prevention and
management. Participants and speakers include fire research and management
with federal, state and
local fire specialists, researchers, and managers, as well as fire
researchers and managers from
nongovernmental organizations and universities. The three-day conference
will cover subjects
including the social and economic aspects of fire; invasive species and
fire; fire and ecosystem
management; interagency fire prevention and education; managing fire in
wildland ecosystems;
applying fire in ecosystem and habitat restoration; wildlife and fire
interactions; emergency
rehabilitation of burned areas; fire and water and air quality; new
technology. In addition, plenary
sessions and panels will focus on the challenge of seizing the opportunity
to manage fire in wildland
ecosystems, the future direction of federal fire management; and the Cerro
Grande Fire.

Who: Fire experts, researchers, and managers from across the nation. For
more information on
specific sessions and speakers, please see
http://www.ice.ucdavis.edu/cafe/docs/fire_booklet.pdf

Why: Fire research and management are quickly changing, and the tasks of the
fire management
organizations are much broader than they were just a few years ago. Fire
management is now in the
forefront of natural resource management and land management planning
nationwide, with
fire-related issues becoming more complex each year. Research is developing
rapidly to provide
both a basic understanding of fire in ecosystems and to meet the growing
management needs. The
conference hosts hope that conference participants will develop a broader
and greater understanding
of the big picture on fire, leading to a broadly based, multidisciplined and
multiperspective fire
community with better communications and interactions between groups. Thus,
conference
participants and speakers include separate specialized groups of fire
researchers and mangers who
can offer both big picture overviews and specialized workshops, symposia,
and meetings.

Hosted by: California Association for Fire Ecology, The Nature Conservancy,
Tall Timbers
Research Station, Joint Fire Science Program, International Association of
Wildlife Fire, and in
cooperation with the University of California, Davis.

Where: 500 Hotel Circle North, San Diego, CA.

As the nation's largest water, earth and biological science and civilian
mapping agency, the USGS
works in cooperation with more than 2000 organizations across the country to
provide reliable,
impartial, scientific information to resource managers, planners, and other
customers. This
information is gathered in every state by USGS scientists to minimize the
loss of life and property
from natural disasters, contribute to the sound conservation, economic and
physical development of
the nation's natural resources, and enhance the quality of life by
monitoring water, biological, energy
and mineral resources.

   => U.S. Transportation Secretary Slater Announces Plan For Improving
Child
Restraint Systems

To advance the Clinton-Gore administration's comprehensive
strategy to protect child passengers, U.S. Transportation Secretary Rodney
E. Slater today announced a draft child restraint systems safety plan and
invited public comment.

The Child Restraint Systems Safety Plan by the U.S. Department of
Transportation's National Highway Traffic Safety Administration outlines
more than 30 new or ongoing agency activities to improve motor vehicle
safety for children from infancy through age 10.

"We are committed to reducing death and injuries of children in
motor vehicle crashes and the plan will help advance this effort," said
Secretary Slater. "Parents want the best for their children, and their
protection from injury in a crash is of paramount concern safety is
President Clinton and Vice President Gore's highest transportation
priority."

"It is imperative that we at NHTSA take every possible step to
advance the cause of child passenger safety through innovative program
development," said Dr. Sue Bailey, the agency's administrator.

The Child Restraint Systems Safety Plan focuses on two major
strategies: encouraging the correct use of safety seats that afford
optimal protection and providing useful consumer information on child
passenger safety.

The plan proposes that NHTSA add safety seats to vehicles that are
crash tested through its New Car Assessment Program (NCAP); develop a
10-year-old child dummy to better evaluate the performance of booster
seats designed for larger children; review test procedures for NHTSA's
standard on child safety seats; publish a "best practices" guide for
organizations planning to establish safety seat fitting stations; and
provide additional consumer information on the features and proper use of
safety seats.

In announcing data from the 1999 Fatality Analysis Reporting
System earlier this month, Secretary Slater noted that President Clinton's
goal of reducing fatalities among children under five by 15 percent, set
in 1997, was met in 1999, one year ahead of the President's target date.
Fatalities in this group decreased to 555 in 1999 from 652 in 1996.

In announcing The Child Restraint Systems Safety Plan, Secretary
Slater reminded all parents and caregivers to always transport young
children in the back seat of a motor vehicle and be sure they are properly
restrained for every trip. In addition, all children who weigh 40 to 80
pounds should use booster seats in combination with adult lap-shoulder
belts.

NHTSA deputy administrator Rosalyn G. Millman last May announced
before a House Commerce subcommittee that the Department would develop The
Child Restraint Systems Safety Plan.

The agency is seeking comments on the draft plan through Dec. 22,
2000. The plan will be on the Internet at
http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/people/injury/childps and in the Nov. 27, 2000,
Federal Register

   => Classified Ads

Door-to-Door CoPilot Version 2.0 GPS TravRoute
List Price:
$299.99
Our Price:
$250.99
Platform: Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows NT
Media: CD-ROM
Availability: This item usually ships within 2-3 days.
Features:
Enter the street address of your destination, and CoPilot computes the exact
route
CoPilot speaks instructions telling you where to turn--every step of the way
Gives you new directions if you miss a turn, encounter traffic, or choose
another route
Complete nationwide information on one CD that features more than 96 million
addresses
GPS receiver picks up satellite signals and uses them to pinpoint your
location on earth
Shipping: Currently, item can be shipped only within the U.S.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00000J495/thedisastercenteA/

FREE 30 days of StormWarn by Email, Pager, PCS/GSM Phone, Business Fax at no
cost*
Sign up today and you'll receive no obligation, no commitment StormWarn . If
you find it helpful, you can then decide to continue service at very low
rates. Your account is held in strictest confidence and you won't keep
hearing from us if you decide not to keep the service. We believe in the
value of StormWarn, and we think you will too.
*Direct pages and faxes are limited to 50 bulletins during the trial period.
http://www.stormwarn.com/index.asp?a=10296

   => Links Area

LAKE EFFECT SNOWS
Great Lakes
Cloud and snow bands formed by the winds from the storm in southeastern
Canada blowing across
the Lakes Superior, Michigan, and Huron
 are visible in this GOES-8 image.
http://www.osei.noaa.gov/Events/Snow/US_Northeast/SNWusNE327_G8.jpg

Additional information on Lake Effect snows may be viewed at the following
links:

http://metsun1.met.sjsu.edu/~craig/lake_effect/introduction.htm

http://www_das.uwyo.edu/~geerts/cwx/notes/chap10/lake_effect_snow.html

http://aol.weather.com/encyclopedia/winter/lake.html

http://www.comet.ucar.edu/class/smfaculty/byrd/sld001.htm

EASTERN NORTH AMERICAN SNOWCOVER
Eastern North America
Snow cover over much of North America is visible in this GOES-8 image.
Cloud bands that form
the lake effect snows are visible over the Great Lakes. Similar
cloud patters have formed offshore in the Atlantic from the brisk northwest
winds.
http://www.osei.noaa.gov/Events/Snow/US_Overview/SNWusOVW327_G8.jpg

WESTERN NORTH AMERICAN SNOWCOVER
Western North America
Snow cover over the western mountains and much of central North America is
visible in this
GOES-10 image. Low clouds in the
mountains make it difficult to distinguish snow from clouds. The higher
clouds are white in the lower
latitudes and more blue in the
higher latitudes.
http://www.osei.noaa.gov/Events/Snow/US_Overview/SNWusOVW327_G10.jpg

* Drug-Susceptible Tuberculosis Outbreak in a State
   Correctional Facility Housing HIV-Infected Inmates
   --- South Carolina, 1999--2000
   http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm4946a1.htm

* Update: West Nile Virus Activity --- Eastern United
   States, 2000
   http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm4946a2.htm

* Measles, Rubella, and Congenital Rubella Syndrome ---
   United States and Mexico, 1997--1999
   http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm4946a3.htm

* Notifiable Diseases/Deaths in Selected Cities Weekly
   Information
   http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm4946md.htm

   => How to Be Featured as our Guest Columnist

If you have report or notice that you think would be of interest to the
readers of the SitRep please send an email to: host{at}disastercenter.com

   => Subscribe/Unsubscribe information

The information presented here is not authoritative.
It contains preliminary and partial information reports. It is intended to serve as a general daily digest of disaster related reports. Any other use is not intended or authorized.

The Disaster Center is a partner with CASI - Central Atlantic Storm Investigators. CASI is a group of over a thousand amateur and professional meteorologists, storm spotters, and weather observers from around the world dedicated to the observation and documentation of weather events
http://www.weatherwatchers.org

The Current Report can be accessed at:
http://www.disastercenter.com/current.htm
If you wish to send a report please use our Disaster Center Situation Report Form form located at:
http://www.disastercenter.com/email/formSR.htm

To subcribe or unsubscribe to this list send an e-mail to:
sitrep-request{at}disastercenter.com
with the word
subscribe
or the word
unsubscribe
only, in the body of the message.

If you wish to contact the list owner send an e-mail to: host{at}disastercenter.com

Copyright The Disaster Center
Please feel free to to pass this e-zine along to your friends.
However we ask that keep it intact and forward it along in its entirety.

===================================================
CASI StormReports Email List

TOO MUCH StormReport EMAIL?
Set yourself to "Digest" to receive only ONE Email per day!
http://stormreports{at}casi-internal

CASI StormReports Administration Addresses:
  Post message: stormreports{at}casi-internal
  UNSUBSCRIBE: stormreports-unsubscribe{at}egroups.com OR
  http://stormreports{at}casi-internal
  ReSubscribe: stormreports-subscribe{at}egroups.com OR
  http://stormreports{at}casi-internal
  List owner: stormreports-owner{at}egroups.com
  TO CHANGE YOUR ADDRESS PLEASE UNSUBSCRIBE THEN RESUBSCRIBE

Posting Suggestions URL:
  http://www.weatherwatchers.org/members/casisr.html
===================================================



This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Sun Dec 31 2000 - 19:41:13 EST