611 NOUS44 KAMA 130038 PNSAMA OKZ001>003-TXZ001>020-130500- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE AMARILLO TX 738 PM CDT SUN JUN 12 2011 ...RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURES SET AT BORGER AND DALHART... A RECORD HIGH OF 104 DEGREES WAS SET AT BORGER TODAY. THIS BROKE THE PREVIOUS RECORD OF 99 LAST SET IN 1953. A RECORD HIGH OF 102 DEGREES WAS SET AT DALHART TODAY. THIS BROKE THE PREVIOUS RECORD OF 99 LAST SET IN 1953. $$ JACKSON  997 NOUS43 KGRR 130158 PNSGRR MIZ051-052-057>059-065>067-074-130400- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE GRAND RAPIDS MI 958 PM EDT SUN JUN 12 2011 ...ONONDAGA TRANSMITTER UNDERGOING MAINTENANCE... THE NOAA WEATHER RADIO STATION OPERATING OUT OF ONONDAGA MICHIGAN...TRANSMITTING ON THE FREQUENCY OF 162.400 MHZ...WILL BE UNDERGOING MAINTENANCE THROUGH 11PM EDT AND WILL BE OFF THE AIR. WE APOLOGIZE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE THIS MAY CAUSE. $$ HOVING  343 NOUS45 KABQ 130159 PNSABQ NMZ515-527>532-534>536-132200- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ALBUQUERQUE NM 800 PM MDT SUN JUN 12 2011 ...WEATHER RADIOS SERVING NORTHEAST AND EAST CENTRAL NEW MEXICO OFF THE AIR... TECHNICAL DIFFICULTIES HAVE FORCED WEATHER RADIO STATION W X L 90 OFF THE AIR UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE. BROADCASTING FROM THE DES MOINES AREA ON A FREQUENCY OF 162.55 MEGAHERTZ...W X L 90 SERVES MUCH OF NORTHEAST NEW MEXICO INCLUDING CLAYTON...RATON...CAPULIN... MOSQUERO...AND ROY. ALSO...WEATHER RADIO STATION W X J 35 IS ALSO EXPERIENCING TECHNICAL DIFFICULTIES...AND WILL BE OFF THE AIR UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE. BROADCASTING FROM THE PORTALES AREA ON A FREQUENCY OF 162.475 MEGAHERTZ...W X J 35 SERVES EAST CENTRAL NEW MEXICO INCLUDING TUCUMCARI...CLOVIS...AND PORTALES. OBTAIN THE LATEST WEATHER INFORMATION AND FORECASTS FROM THE INTERNET AT WEATHER.GOV/ABQ OR FROM YOUR PREFERRED MEDIA OUTLET. WE APOLOGIZE FOR THE INCONVENIENCE AND APPRECIATE YOUR PATIENCE. $$ SHOEMAKE  340 NOUS43 KGRR 130311 PNSGRR MIZ051-052-057>059-065>067-074-130400- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE GRAND RAPIDS MI 1112 PM EDT SUN JUN 12 2011 ...ONONDAGA TRANSMITTER RETURNS TO SERVICE... THE NOAA WEATHER RADIO STATION OPERATING OUT OF ONONDAGA MICHIGAN...TRANSMITTING ON THE FREQUENCY OF 162.400 MHZ...HAS RETURNED TO SERVICE. $$ HOVING  870 NOUS41 KBGM 130329 PNSBGM NYZ009-015>018-022>025-036-037-044>046-055>057-062-PAZ038>040-043- 044-047-048-072-130730- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BINGHAMTON, NY 1129 PM EDT SUN JUN 12 2011 ...MICROBURST /STRAIGHT LINE WIND DAMAGE/ CONFIRMED NEAR ADDISON IN STEUBEN COUNTY NEW YORK... LOCATION...ADDISON IN STEUBEN COUNTY NEW YORK DATE...JUNE 11TH 2011 ESTIMATED TIME...602 PM TO 605 PM EDT. ESTIMATED MAXIMUM WIND SPEED...65 TO 70 MPH. MAXIMUM PATH WIDTH...4 TENTHS OF A MILE. PATH LENGTH...7 TENTHS OF A MILE. BEGINNING LAT/LON...42.11/-77.23 ENDING LAT/LON...42.10/-77.23 * FATALITIES...NONE * INJURIES...NONE * THE INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS PRELIMINARY AND SUBJECT TO CHANGE PENDING FINAL REVIEW OF THE EVENT(S) AND PUBLICATION IN NWS STORM DATA. ...SUMMARY... THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN BINGHAMTON, NY HAS CONFIRMED A MICROBURST /STRAIGHT LINE WIND DAMAGE/ NEAR ADDISON IN STEUBEN COUNTY NEW YORK ON JUNE 11TH 2011. DOWNBURST WIND DAMAGE...LIKELY FROM THE REAR FLANK DOWNDRAFT OF THE STORM...CAUSED DAMAGE TO PART OF ADDISON, NY. THE DAMAGE PATH STARTED JUST NORTH OF ADDISON AT 32 WALL STREET WHERE A LARGE TREE WAS SNAPPED AT THE BASE. A FEW SMALLER BRANCHES WERE ALSO BROKEN BUT NO DAMAGE COULD BE FOUND TO ANY OF THE HOUSES NEARBY. WINDS THEREFORE WERE ESTIMATED TO BE BETWEEN 65 AND 70 MPH AT THIS LOCATION. A PATH OF SPORADIC DAMAGE INCLUDING MAINLY SMALLER BRANCHES BEING BROKEN WITH A FEW UPROOTED TREES COULD BE FOUND SOUTH-SOUTHEAST FROM WALL STREET THROUGH THE VILLAGE OF ADDISON. THIS INCLUDED SOME DAMAGE ON WALL STREET...PARK PLACE...MAPLE STREET...AND FRONT STREET. THE WORST DAMAGE WAS TO 12 WALL STREET WHERE 3 LARGE TREES WERE UPROOTED...ONE OF WHICH WAS MORE THAN 150 YEARS OLD. THE BIGGEST TREE WAS OVER 4 FEET IN DIAMETER. ALL THREE OF THESE TREES WERE POINTING TOWARD ABOUT 180 DEGREES. DESPITE THE IMPRESSIVE SIZE OF THE TREES THAT WERE UPROOTED...BUILDINGS RIGHT NEAR THESE TREES SHOWED NO DAMAGE ASIDE FROM WHERE THE TREE FELL ON THEM. IN ADDITION...THE TREES BEING UPROOTED WERE LIKELY AIDED BY A VERY WET SOIL. WINDS AROUND 12 WALL STREET WERE LIKELY IN THE 65 TO 70 MPH RANGE. THROUGHOUT THE REST OF ADDISON...FROM FRONT STREET NORTH...MAINLY SMALLER BRANCHES WERE DOWNED. THIS IS CONSISTENT WITH WINDS AROUND 60 MPH. A FEW PINE TREES WERE UPROOTED BEHIND 43 FRONT STREET BUT THESE TREES WERE PARTIALLY DEAD AND NO DAMAGE COULD BE FOUND NEARBY TO THESE TREES. THE PATH CONTINUED ACROSS THE CANISTEO RIVER AND TUSCARORA CREEK TO A SERIES OF BASEBALL FIELDS JUST SOUTH OF WHERE THE RIVER AND CREEK INTERSECT. PART OF ONE TREE WAS SNAPPED 10 FEET FROM THE BASE AND BLOWN INTO THE CANISTEO RIVER ITSELF. FARTHER SOUTH...MAINLY 1 TO 3 INCHE DIAMETER TREE BRANCHES COULD BE FOUND LITTERED ACROSS THE BASEBALL FIELDS. MOST OF THE SIGNS HANGING ON THE OUTFIELD WALL OF THE LITTLE LEAGUE FIELD WERE BLOWN DOWN. WINDS IN THIS AREA WERE ESTIMATED TO BE BETWEEN 60 AND 65 MPH. THE PATH ENDED ON CLEVELAND DRIVE ABOUT 2 TENTHS OF A MILE NORTHEAST OF TUSCARORA ELEMENTARY SCHOOL. ALMOST ALL OF THE DAMAGE WAS POINTED TO BETWEEN 160 AND 180 DEGREES. IN ADDITION WHERE THE LARGEST TREES WERE UPROOTED...THE TREES WERE EITHER POINTING IN THE SAME DIRECTION...OR FANNED OUT (DIVERGENT WIND PATTERN) WHICH IS SUGGESTIVE OF DOWNBURST WINDS. IT IS STILL POSSIBLE THAT A TORNADO MAY HAVE OCCURRED FARTHER SOUTH OF ADDISON (ABOUT 2 MILES)...WHERE DOPPLER RADAR SHOWED THE STRONGEST ROTATION. HOWEVER...NO DAMAGE HAS BEEN REPORTED THUS FAR AND WE ONLY SURVEYED WHERE WE HAD CONFIRMED REPORTS OF DAMAGE. IF YOU HAVE DAMAGE REPORTS...ESPECIALLY SOUTH OF ADDISON, NY...PLEASE EMAIL US AT BGM.STORMREPORT@NOAA.GOV. THIS INFORMATION CAN ALSO BE FOUND ON OUR WEBSITE AT WEATHER.GOV/BGM. FOR REFERENCE... A MICROBURST IS A CONVECTIVE DOWNDRAFT WITH AN AFFECTED OUTFLOW AREA OF LESS THAN 2 1/2 MILES WIDE AND PEAK WINDS LASTING LESS THAN 5 MINUTES. MICROBURSTS MAY INDUCE DANGEROUS HORIZONTAL/VERTICAL WIND SHEARS...WHICH CAN ADVERSELY AFFECT AIRCRAFT PERFORMANCE AND CAUSE PROPERTY DAMAGE. STRAIGHT-LINE WINDS ARE GENERALLY ANY WIND THAT IS NOT ASSOCIATED WITH ROTATION...USED MAINLY TO DIFFERENTIATE THEM FROM TORNADIC WINDS. $$ HEDEN  824 NOUS43 KICT 130423 PNSICT KSZ032-033-047>053-067>072-082-083-091>096-098>100-140500- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE WICHITA KS 1122 PM CDT SUN JUN 12 2011 ...DOES A DRY SPRING SIGNAL A HOT SUMMER TO COME... AS EVERYONE IS FAIRLY WELL AWARE OF...SPRING 2011 (MARCH-MAY) WAS QUITE DRY ACROSS SOUTH-CENTRAL KANSAS. THE THREE-MONTH PERIOD MEASURED A MEAGER 4.88 INCHES AT THE WICHITA MID-CONTINENT AIRPORT...A WHOPPING 4.96 INCHES BELOW NORMAL. SPRING 2011 WAS IN FACT THE 12TH DRIEST MARCH-MAY PERIOD RECORDED IN WICHITA SINCE 1889. THE HYPOTHESIS GOING INTO THIS WRITE-UP WAS THAT AN ABNORMALLY DRY SPRING SHOULD PRODUCE AN ABNORMALLY WARM SUMMER...SINCE DRY GROUND AND AN ASSOCIATED DRY ATMOSPHERE TEND TO RESULT IN RELATIVELY WARMER TEMPERATURES. BUT IS THIS TRUE FROM A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE? AVERAGING WICHITA'S DRIEST MARCH-MAY PERIODS SINCE 1889...WITH TOTAL PRECIPITATION DEFICITS OF AT LEAST 4 INCHES...YIELD AVERAGE SUMMER TEMPERATURES ABOUT 0.5 DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL. IN CONTRAST...SPRING PRECIPITATION SURPLUSES OF AT LEAST 4 INCHES YIELD AN AVERAGE SUMMER TEMPERATURE ABOUT 0.5 DEGREES BELOW NORMAL. IN OTHER WORDS...DRY SPRINGS TYPICALLY YIELD SUMMERS THAT ARE ONLY SLIGHTLY WARMER THAN NORMAL...AND WET SPRINGS TYPICALLY YIELD SUMMERS THAT ARE ONLY SLIGHTLY COOLER THAN NORMAL. SOME DRY SPRINGS HAVE INDEED PRODUCED VERY HOT SUMMERS...SUCH AS 1936...1933 AND 1913. HOWEVER...SOME DRY SPRINGS ALSO PRODUCED RATHER COOL SUMMERS...SUCH AS 1950 AND 1967. ADDITIONALLY...SOME OF THE HOTTEST SUMMERS ON RECORD...SUCH AS 1934...1980...1954 AND 2010 HAD PRECEDING SPRING PRECIPITATION DEFICITS OF NO MORE THAN 1 INCH OR SO. IT IS INTERESTING TO NOTE THAT 80 PERCENT OF THE TOP-20 WARMEST SUMMERS SINCE 1889 RECORDED SPRING PRECIPITATION DEFICITS OF SOME KIND. IN CONTRAST...65 PERCENT OF THE TOP-20 COOLEST SUMMERS RECORDED SPRING PRECIPITATION SURPLUSES OF SOME KIND. IN SUMMARY...ABNORMALLY DRY SPRINGS IN WICHITA ON AVERAGE YIELD SLIGHTLY WARMER THAN NORMAL SUMMERS...AND ABNORMALLY WET SPRINGS ON AVERAGE YIELD SLIGHTLY COOLER THAN NORMAL SUMMERS. HOWEVER...THERE APPEARS TO BE LITTLE CORRELATION BETWEEN A DRY SPRING PRECEDING A MUCH WARMER THAN NORMAL SUMMER...NOR A WET SPRING PRECEDING A MUCH COOLER THAN NORMAL SUMMER. $$ ADK  596 NOUS44 KAMA 130423 PNSAMA OKZ001>003-TXZ001>020-131030- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE AMARILLO TX 1123 PM CDT SUN JUN 12 2011 ...NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DAMAGE SURVEY CONFIRMS EF1 TORNADO NEAR TYRONE OKLAHOMA... THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN AMARILLO TEXAS HAS COMPLETED A DAMAGE ASSESSMENT FROM THE EF1 TORNADO NEAR TYRONE OKLAHOMA ON SATURDAY JUNE 11 2011. THE TORNADO FIRST TOUCHED DOWN NEAR THE INTERSECTION OF MILE 54 ROAD AND B ROAD NORTHEAST OF TYRONE AROUND 711 PM CDT. THE TORNADO WAS ON THE GROUND FOR ABOUT 2.1 MILES WITH A MAXIMUM WIDTH OF 50 YARDS. THE MAXIMUM WIND SPEEDS WERE AROUND 90 MPH. THE TORNADO DISSIPATED JUST SOUTHEAST OF THE INTERSECTION OF MILE 56 AND B ROAD AROUND 725 PM CDT. NO INJURIES OR FATALITIES WERE REPORTED. THIS IS A PRELIMINARY REPORT AND IS SUBJECT TO REVISION BASED ON ANY NEW OR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION. $$ MBS/BK  997 NOUS44 KAMA 130435 PNSAMA OKZ001>003-TXZ001>020-131030- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE AMARILLO TX 1135 PM CDT SUN JUN 12 2011 ...NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DAMAGE SURVEY CONFIRMS VERY STRONG STRAIGHT LINE WINDS NEAR FORGAN OKLAHOMA... THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN AMARILLO TEXAS HAS COMPLETED A DAMAGE ASSESSMENT NEAR FORGAN OKLAHOMA ON SATURDAY JUNE 11 2011. THE CAUSE OF THREE OVERTURNED IRRIGATION PIVOTS AND A SNAPPED POWER POLE FOR ABOUT A 1.5 MILE SWATH BETWEEN HIGHWAY 64 AND HOLLOW EAST 0080 ROAD NEAR HIGHWAY 270 WAS DAMAGING STRAIGHT LINE WINDS UP TO 95 MPH AROUND 823 PM CDT. NO INJURIES OR FATALITIES WERE REPORTED. THIS IS A PRELIMINARY REPORT AND IS SUBJECT TO REVISION BASED ON ANY NEW OR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION. $$ MBS/BK  249 NOUS44 KAMA 130454 PNSAMA OKZ001>003-TXZ001>020-131100- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE AMARILLO TX 1154 PM CDT SUN JUN 12 2011 ...NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DAMAGE SURVEY CONFIRMS EF0 TORNADO NEAR DARROUZETT TEXAS... THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN AMARILLO TEXAS HAS COMPLETED A DAMAGE ASSESSMENT FROM THE EF0 TORNADO NEAR DARROUZETT TEXAS ON SATURDAY JUNE 11 2011. THE TORNADO FIRST TOUCHED DOWN NEAR THE INTERSECTION OF HIGHWAY 15 AND COUNTY ROAD 8 WEST OF DARROUZETT AROUND 720 PM CDT. THE TORNADO WAS ON THE GROUND FOR ABOUT 0.5 MILE WITH A MAXIMUM WIDTH OF 50 YARDS. THE MAXIMUM WIND SPEEDS WERE AROUND 80 MPH. THE TORNADO DISSIPATED JUST SOUTH OF HIGHWAY 15 BETWEEN COUNTY ROADS 8 AND 9 AROUND 722 PM CDT. NO INJURIES OR FATALITIES WERE REPORTED. THIS IS A PRELIMINARY REPORT AND IS SUBJECT TO REVISION BASED ON ANY NEW OR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION. $$ MBS/BK  051 NOUS41 KBTV 130500 PNSBTV NYZ026>031-034-035-087-VTZ001>012-016>019-132000- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BURLINGTON VT 100 AM EDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...HEAT - A WEATHER HAZARD OF SUMMER... THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE OFFICES AND THE EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT COMMUNITY IN VERMONT AND NEW YORK ARE JOINING FORCES TO DESIGNATE TODAY AS HEAT AWARENESS DAY IN VERMONT AND NEW YORK. THIS JOINT DESIGNATION IS TO BRING AWARENESS OF THE HEALTH DANGERS THAT CAN BE ASSOCIATED WITH EXCESSIVE HEAT AND OFFER SOME SOLUTIONS TO PROTECT YOURSELF FROM THE HEAT. THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN BURLINGTON CATEGORIZES A HOT DAY WHEN TEMPERATURES REACH 90 DEGREES OR WARMER. IN THE CHAMPLAIN VALLEY...WE AVERAGE SIX SUCH DAYS A YEAR. SINCE 1883...THERE HAVE BEEN OVER A DOZEN YEARS THAT THE MERCURY HAS NOT REACHED 90 DEGREES...THE LATEST YEARS BEING 2000 AND 2004. MEANWHILE...THE FOLLOWING IS A LIST OF THE TOP YEARS WITH THE MOST NUMBER OF 90 DEGREE OR WARMER DAYS. # DAYS AT OR ABOVE 90 DEGREES YEAR 26 1949 21 1944 20 1988 18 1999,1995 A HEAT WAVE IS DEFINED AS THREE OR MORE CONSECUTIVE DAYS WITH THE MAXIMUM TEMPERATURE REACHING OR EXCEEDING 90 DEGREES. IN BURLINGTON, THE LONGEST HEAT WAVE WAS 8 DAYS (AUGUST 10-17, 1944). IN 2010... THERE WERE TWO HEAT WAVES IN BURLINGTON...JULY 5-8TH AND AUGUST 31ST-SEPTEMBER 3RD. TOO MUCH HEAT CAN LEAD TO HEALTH DISORDERS SUCH AS HEAT CRAMPS... HEAT EXHAUSTION...HEAT STROKE AND EVEN DEATH. ANNUALLY...THE AVERAGE NUMBER OF HEAT RELATED DEATHS IN THE UNITED STATES IS APPROXIMATELY 160. THEREFORE...WHEN LIFE THREATENING EXCESSIVE HEAT IS EXPECTED...THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE WILL ISSUE EXCESSIVE HEAT WATCHES...WARNINGS AND ADVISORIES TO ALERT THE PUBLIC ON THE POTENTIAL DANGERS. THE GROUPS MOST SUSCEPTIBLE TO THE DANGERS OF HEAT ARE THE ELDERLY...VERY YOUNG...THOSE WITH CHRONIC ILLNESS AND THOSE ON CERTAIN MEDICATIONS. HEAT RELATED HEALTH DISORDERS ARE CAUSED BY THE BODY'S INABILITY TO DISSIPATE THE HEAT...OR IN OTHER WORDS...COOL DOWN. HERE ARE SOME SAFETY TIPS TO BEST COPE WITH THE DANGERS OF HEAT: .WEAR LIGHTWEIGHT...LIGHT COLORED CLOTHING. .DRINK PLENTY OF WATER OR NON-ALCOHOLIC FLUIDS. .SLOW DOWN...TAKE IT EASY...STRENUOUS ACTIVITY SHOULD BE AVOIDED. .IF YOU MUST BE OUTSIDE...TRY TO LESSEN YOUR EXPOSURE AND LIMIT YOUR ACTIVITIES TO THE EARLY MORNING OR LATE EVENING...FIND SHADE...AN AIR-CONDITIONED LOCATION...SWIMMING POOL OR ANY BODY OF WATER. .NEVER LEAVE YOUR CHILDREN OR PETS UNATTENDED IN A VEHICLE. .REMEMBER...YOUR PETS WILL FEEL THE HEAT AS WELL. PROVIDE YOUR PETS WITH PLENTY OF COOL WATER AND KEEP THEM IN A COOL OR SHADED ENVIRONMENT. FOR MORE INFORMATION...PLEASE CHECK NOAA'S NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE WEBSITE AT: WWW.WEATHER.GOV/OM/HEAT. THE SUMMER SEASON IN THE NORTH COUNTRY IS RELATIVELY SHORT...SO LET'S MAKE IT ENJOYABLE AND SAFE WHEN IT COMES TO SUMMER'S HEAT. $$  516 NOUS44 KAMA 130501 PNSAMA OKZ001>003-TXZ001>020-131100- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE AMARILLO TX 1200 AM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DAMAGE SURVEY CONFIRMS EF0 TORNADO NEAR FOLLETT TEXAS... THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN AMARILLO TEXAS HAS COMPLETED A DAMAGE ASSESSMENT FROM THE EF0 TORNADO NEAR FOLLETT TEXAS ON SATURDAY JUNE 11 2011. THE TORNADO BRIEFLY TOUCHED DOWN NEAR THE INTERSECTION OF COUNTY ROAD 19 AND COUNTY ROAD D NORTHWEST OF FOLLETT AROUND 750 PM CDT. THE TORNADO WAS ON THE GROUND FOR ABOUT 300 YARDS WITH A MAXIMUM WIDTH OF 50 YARDS. THE MAXIMUM WIND SPEEDS WERE AROUND 80 MPH. NO INJURIES OR FATALITIES WERE REPORTED. THIS IS A PRELIMINARY REPORT AND IS SUBJECT TO REVISION BASED ON ANY NEW OR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION. $$ MBS/BK  464 NOUS45 KBOU 130859 PNSBOU COZ030>051-132300- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER CO 259 AM MDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...TODAY IN METRO DENVER WEATHER HISTORY... 11-14 IN 1999...DAMAGE FROM SEVERAL HAILSTORMS IN AND NEAR METRO DENVER TOTALED 35 MILLION DOLLARS. ABOUT 17.5 MILLION DOLLARS WAS FROM AUTOMOBILE CLAIMS WITH ANOTHER 17.5 MILLION IN HOMEOWNER CLAIMS. THE AREAS HARDEST HIT BY THE STORMS INCLUDED CASTLE ROCK...COMMERCE CITY...EVERGREEN... AND GOLDEN. 12-17 IN 2000...TWO LARGE WILDFIRES DEVELOPED IN THE FRONT RANGE FOOTHILLS AS CARELESS CAMPERS AND VERY DRY CONDITIONS PROVED TO BE A DANGEROUS COMBINATION. STRONG WINDS GUSTING IN EXCESS OF 60 MPH ON THE 13TH FANNED THE FLAMES... SPREADING BOTH WILDFIRES OUT OF CONTROL. WINDS GUSTED TO 78 MPH ATOP NIWOT RIDGE NEAR THE CONTINENTAL DIVIDE WEST OF BOULDER. THE HI MEADOWS WILDFIRE...ABOUT 35 MILES SOUTHWEST OF DENVER...CONSUMED NEARLY 11 THOUSAND ACRES AND 80 STRUCTURES...MOSTLY HIGH PRICED HOMES. THE BOBCAT WILDFIRE...LOCATED ABOUT 12 MILES SOUTHWEST OF FORT COLLINS... CONSUMED NEARLY 11 THOUSAND ACRES AND 22 STRUCTURES. LATE ON THE 16TH...A STRONG COLD FRONT MOVED SOUTH OVER THE GREAT PLAINS INTO NORTHEASTERN COLORADO. LOW LEVEL UPSLOPE CONDITIONS DEVELOPED IN THE WAKE OF THE FRONT...PRODUCING 2 TO 4 INCHES OF SNOWFALL OVERNIGHT AT ELEVATIONS ABOVE 8 THOUSAND FEET. FIREFIGHTERS WERE ABLE TO CONTAIN BOTH FIRES SHORTLY THEREAFTER. 13 IN 1956...A MICROBURST CAUSED A BRIEF WIND GUST TO 59 MPH AT STAPLETON AIRPORT. IN 1957...AN UNCONFIRMED TORNADO APPEARED TO TOUCH THE GROUND IN THE VICINITY OF FRANKTOWN. NO DAMAGE WAS REPORTED FROM THE TWISTER. IN 1968...A VIOLENT GUST OF WIND...POSSIBLY ASSOCIATED WITH A THUNDERSTORM...CAUSED 75 HUNDRED DOLLARS DAMAGE IN BOULDER. IN 1973...HAIL...1/2 TO 3/4 INCH IN DIAMETER...FELL OVER LAKEWOOD. FLASH FLOODING OCCURRED IN WEST DENVER FROM THE SAME STORM. IN 1974...A THUNDERSTORM WIND GUST TO 64 MPH WAS RECORDED AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. IN 1977...HAIL THE SIZE OF TABLE TENNIS BALLS...1 1/2 INCHES IN DIAMETER...WAS REPORTED IN BOULDER. IN 1981...LARGE HAIL TO GOLF BALL SIZE FELL IN DENVER... NORTHGLENN...AND BRIGHTON. HAIL AS LARGE AS BASEBALLS WAS REPORTED IN FEDERAL HEIGHTS. IN 1984...ONE OF THE WORST HAILSTORMS EVER EXPERIENCED IN METRO DENVER STRUCK THE NORTHWESTERN SUBURBS OF ARVADA...WHEAT RIDGE...AND LAKEWOOD...BUT LARGE HAIL ALSO FELL IN GOLDEN... SOUTHEAST DENVER...AND AURORA. HOMES AND OTHER BUILDINGS SUSTAINED AROUND 200 MILLION DOLLARS IN DAMAGE. THOUSANDS OF CARS WERE BATTERED BY GIANT HAILSTONES...AND TOTAL DAMAGE TO VEHICLES WAS ESTIMATED AT 150 MILLION DOLLARS. IN SOME AREAS...GOLF BALL SIZE HAIL FELL CONTINUOUSLY FOR 30 TO 40 MINUTES. SOME PLACES WERE PELTED WITH A FEW STONES AS LARGE AS GRAPEFRUITS! ROOFS ON THOUSANDS OF STRUCTURES WERE SEVERELY DAMAGED. UNCOUNTED CAR WINDSHIELDS WERE BROKEN; TWO-THIRDS OF ARVADA'S POLICE CARS WERE RENDERED INOPERABLE. TORRENTIAL RAINS...WITH AS MUCH AS 4.75 INCHES IN LAKEWOOD CLOGGED DRAINS AND CAUSED WIDESPREAD DAMAGE FROM FLOODING. IN SOME PLACES HAIL WAS WASHED INTO DRIFTS SEVERAL FEET DEEP. ABOUT 20 PEOPLE WERE INJURED BY THE GIANT HAILSTONES. ONE COUPLE WAS HOSPITALIZED. A WOMAN DROWNED WHEN SHE WAS TRAPPED UNDER A TRAILER BY HIGH WATER. ONLY PEA SIZE HAIL FELL AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. IN 1988...2 INCH HAIL FELL IN PARKER. SOFT HAIL 1 INCH IN DIAMETER FELL AT THE MOUTH OF TURKEY CREEK CANYON 5 MILES SOUTHEAST OF MORRISON. HAIL BETWEEN 1 INCH AND 1 3/4 INCHES FELL AT BOTH BENNETT AND STRASBURG. A TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN BRIEFLY AT STRASBURG. A BRIEF FUNNEL CLOUD WAS SIGHTED BY NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE OBSERVERS 15 MILES SOUTHWEST OF STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. IN 1991...A BOULDER MAN WAS INJURED WHEN STRUCK BY LIGHTNING WHILE IN A TENT. HE RECEIVED ONLY MINOR BURNS. IN 1997...LIGHTNING STRUCK A HOME IN DENVER. THE EXTENT OF THE DAMAGE WAS UNKNOWN. A HOME IN LITTLETON WAS ALSO STRUCK. THE HOUSE CAUGHT FIRE...BUT THE EXTENT OF THE DAMAGE WAS NOT KNOWN. IN 1998...A STRONG MOUNTAIN WAVE PRODUCED A BRIEF PERIOD OF HIGH WINDS ALONG THE FRONT RANGE. A SMALL BUILDING ATOP SQUAW PASS WEST OF DENVER WAS BLOWN DOWN. TREE LIMBS WERE DOWNED ACROSS METRO DENVER. PEAK WIND GUSTS INCLUDED: 80 MPH ON SQUAW PASS...69 MPH AT JEFFERSON COUNTY AIRPORT NEAR BROOMFIELD...AND 60 MPH IN WESTMINSTER AND AT THE NATIONAL CENTER FOR ATMOSPHERIC RESEARCH IN BOULDER. WEST-NORTHWEST WINDS GUSTED TO 51 MPH AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. IN 2001...HIGH WINDS DEVELOPED BRIEFLY IN BOULDER COUNTY. A PEAK WIND GUST TO 76 MPH WAS RECORDED AT THE NATIONAL CENTER FOR ATMOSPHERIC RESEARCH ATOP THE MESA IN BOULDER. A WIND GUST TO 72 MPH WAS RECORDED AT SOUTHERN HILLS MIDDLE SCHOOL IN BOULDER. LIGHTNING STARTED A SMALL FIRE...WHICH DAMAGED THE ROOF OF A HOUSE IN GREENWOOD VILLAGE. IN 2009...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED HAIL UP TO ONE INCH IN DIAMETER NEAR ARVADA AND BYERS...AS WELL AS 7 MILES NORTH-NORTHWEST OF FRONT RANGE AIRPORT NEAR WATKINS. 13-14 IN 2006...THE HIGH TEMPERATURE OF 99 DEGREES ON THE 13TH EQUALED THE RECORD MAXIMUM TEMPERATURE FOR THE DATE FIRST SET IN 1994. THE HIGH TEMEPERATURE OF 102 DEGREES ON THE 14TH WAS A NEW RECORD MAXIMUM TEMPERATURE FOR THE DATE. $$  522 NOUS43 KIND 131015 PNSIND INZ047-131230- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE INDIANAPOLIS IN 615 AM EDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...ON THIS DATE IN CENTRAL INDIANA WEATHER HISTORY... 2008 BROWNSBURG...LIGHTNING STRIKES A CONSTRUCTION CRANE...INJURING ITS OPERATOR. $$  081 NOUS43 KBIS 131015 RRA PNSBIS NDZ035-131345- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 515 AM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...STAGE OF THE MISSOURI RIVER AT BISMARCK... AT 415 AM CDT MONDAY...THE MISSOURI RIVER STAGE WAS 17.80 FEET. $$ JV  612 NOUS43 KLSX 131022 PNSLSX ILZ058-059-079-095>102-MOZ018-019-026-027-034>036-041-042-047>052- 059>065-072>075-084-085-099-131130- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ST LOUIS MO 522 AM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...SAFETY RULES FOR SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS... A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH HAS BEEN ISSUED BY THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE. IN THE INTEREST OF PUBLIC SAFETY...THE FOLLOWING SAFETY RULES ARE PROVIDED. PUBLIC AND COMMERCIAL BROADCAST STATIONS SERVING THE AFFECTED AREA ARE ASKED TO BROADCAST THESE SAFETY MESSAGES FREQUENTLY WHILE THE WATCH IS IN EFFECT. A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH MEANS CONDITIONS ARE FAVORABLE FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN AND CLOSE TO THE WATCH AREA. IF YOU ARE IN THE WATCH AREA...KEEP UP TO DATE OF THE LATEST WEATHER INFORMATION. THESE STORMS CAN DEVELOP RAPIDLY SO THERE MAY BE OCCASIONS WHEN ADVANCE WARNING IS NOT POSSIBLE. A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WARNING MEANS A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM HAS BEEN OBSERVED OR INDICATED ON RADAR. IF YOU ARE IN THE PATH OR NEAR THE STORM...TAKE IMMEDIATE ACTIONS TO PROTECT LIFE AND PROPERTY. FOLLOW THESE SAFETY RULES: (1) IN OPEN COUNTRY...YOU SHOULD SEEK SHELTER AND AVOID TREES WHICH CAN BE TARGETS FOR LIGHTNING. IF THERE IS NO SHELTER... GO TO A DITCH OR CULVERT BUT BEWARE OF RISING WATER WHICH CAN CAUSE FLOODING. (2) WHEN INDOORS...STAY AWAY FROM OUTSIDE WALLS AND WINDOWS AND GO TO AN INTERIOR ROOM ON THE LOWEST LEVEL. AVOID USING ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES WHILE THE STORM IS NEARBY. (3) IN MOBILE HOMES...YOU SHOULD LEAVE AND SEEK NEARBY SAFE SHELTER. (4) IF SWIMMING OR ON A BOAT...YOU SHOULD GET TO SHORE AS QUICKLY AS POSSIBLE AND FIND SHELTER. A THUNDERSTORM IS CONSIDERED SEVERE WHEN IT CONTAINS ONE INCH OR LARGER DIAMETER SIZE HAIL AND/OR WIND GUSTS OF 58 MILES AN HOUR OR GREATER. A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM CAN ALSO PRODUCE DEADLY LIGHTNING AND VERY HEAVY RAIN WHICH CAN LEAD TO FLASH FLOODING. REMEMBER...WITH ANY SEVERE THUNDERSTORM THERE IS ALWAYS THE POSSIBILITY OF TORNADOES. $$ TILLY  404 NOUS43 KICT 131101 PNSICT KSZ032-033-047>053-067>072-082-083-091>096-098>100-131500- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE WICHITA KS 601 AM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...ON THIS DATE IN WEATHER HISTORY... IN 1989...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS RUMBLED FROM THE SOUTHERN PLAINS TO THE CAROLINAS. SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS CONTINUED ACROSS PARTS OF TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA FOR SEVERAL DAYS...PRODUCING VERY HEAVY RAIN. OKLAHOMA CITY RECEIVED 13.41 INCHES OF RAIN FOR THE FIRST 13 DAYS OF THE MONTH. FORT WORTH RECEIVED 29.56 INCHES FOR THE YEAR...WHICH WAS 13 INCHES ABOVE NORMAL. AT THE SAME TIME...A SEVERE DROUGHT CONTINUED ACROSS SOUTH TEXAS. $$ AUTO  944 NOUS43 KICT 131105 CCA PNSICT KSZ032-033-047>053-067>072-082-083-091>096-098>100-131500- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE WICHITA KS 605 AM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...ON THIS DATE IN WEATHER HISTORY... IN 1989...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS RUMBLED FROM THE SOUTHERN PLAINS TO THE CAROLINAS. SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS CONTINUED ACROSS PARTS OF TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA FOR MOST OF A 2 WEEK PERIOD...PRODUCING VERY HEAVY RAINS. OKLAHOMA CITY RECEIVED 13.41 INCHES OF RAIN FROM JUNE 1ST TO THE 13TH WHILE FORT WORTH MEASURED 10.87 INCHES DURING THIS SAME PERIOD. $$ AUTO  144 NOUS41 KCAR 131112 PNSCAR MEZ001>006-010-011-015>017-029>032-132312- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT SPOTTER REPORTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CARIBOU ME 712 AM EDT MON JUN 13 2011 THE FOLLOWING ARE UNOFFICIAL OBSERVATIONS TAKEN DURING THE PAST 24 HOURS FOR THE STORM THAT HAS BEEN AFFECTING OUR REGION. APPRECIATION IS EXTENDED TO HIGHWAY DEPARTMENTS...COOPERATIVE OBSERVERS...CWOP OBSERVERS...SKYWARN SPOTTERS AND MEDIA FOR THESE REPORTS. THIS SUMMARY IS ALSO AVAILABLE ON OUR HOME PAGE AT WEATHER.GOV/CARIBOU ********************STORM TOTAL RAINFALL******************** LOCATION STORM TOTAL TIME/DATE COMMENTS RAINFALL OF /INCHES/ MEASUREMENT MAINE ...AROOSTOOK COUNTY... CLAYTON LAKE 1.45 653 AM 6/13 MONTICELLO 3 NW 1.01 602 AM 6/13 MAPLETON 3 ESE 0.94 634 AM 6/13 ASHLAND 2 SSE 0.80 651 AM 6/13 CONNOR 0.78 608 AM 6/13 ALLAGASH 0.73 711 AM 6/13 CARIBOU AIRPORT 0.64 652 AM 6/13 ...PISCATAQUIS COUNTY... GUILFORD 0.51 711 AM 6/13 ...WASHINGTON COUNTY... EAST MACHIAS 4 E 0.36 654 AM 6/13 **********************24 HOUR RAINFALL********************** LOCATION 24 HOUR TIME/DATE COMMENTS RAINFALL OF /INCHES/ MEASUREMENT MAINE ...HANCOCK COUNTY... ELLSWORTH 5 NNE 0.34 651 AM 6/13 COCORAHS HANCOCK 3 SE 0.23 630 AM 6/13 COCORAHS SURRY 2 ESE 0.22 700 AM 6/13 COCORAHS ELLSWORTH 7 NW 0.16 800 AM 6/12 COCORAHS DEDHAM 7 SSE 0.12 800 AM 6/12 COCORAHS BROOKLIN 3 NW 0.11 800 AM 6/12 COCORAHS MARIAVILLE 1 ESE 0.05 800 AM 6/12 COCORAHS ELLSWORTH 6 SE 0.02 630 AM 6/12 COCORAHS ELLSWORTH 5 N 0.01 700 AM 6/12 COCORAHS ELLSWORTH 8 NNW 0.01 700 AM 6/12 COCORAHS ...PENOBSCOT COUNTY... LINCOLN 4 NE 0.90 500 AM 6/13 COCORAHS ARGYLE 1 S 0.14 800 AM 6/12 COCORAHS PATTEN 3 WNW 0.09 700 AM 6/12 COCORAHS ...WASHINGTON COUNTY... PEMBROKE 5 SSE 0.60 645 AM 6/13 COCORAHS COOPER 1 SE 0.51 530 AM 6/13 COCORAHS $$ MBH  490 NOUS43 KGLD 131201 PNSGLD PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE GOODLAND KS 600 AM MDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...ON THIS DATE IN WEATHER HISTORY... IN 1998, HIGH WINDS OF UP TO 70 MPH WERE REPORTED ACROSS DUNDY, HITCHCOCK AND RED WILLOW COUNTIES. THE WINDS DAMAGED HOUSES AND TREES ACROSS THE AREA AND BLEW OVER SOME TENTS. IN 2001, STRONG WINDS UP TO 85 MPH COMBINED WITH HAIL PRODUCED A SWATH OF CROP DAMAGE ACROSS SOUTHERN RED WILLOW COUNTY IN NEBRASKA. $$  958 NOUS43 KLMK 131226 PNSLMK INZ076>079-083-084-089>092-KYZ023>043-045>049-053>057-061>067- 070>078-081-082-020745- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE LOUISVILLE KY 820 AM EDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...LEXINGTON WEATHER RADIO IS OFF THE AIR... NOAA WEATHER RADIO KIH41 IN LEXINGTON IS OFF THE AIR. REPAIRS ARE IN PROGRESS. IN THE MEANTIME RESIDENTS IN THE BLUEGRASS REGION CAN TUNE TO FRANKFORT NWR WHICH IS ON 162.500 MHZ AND THE OWENTON TRANSMITTER ON 162.450 MHZ. $$ SZAPPANOS  029 NOUS43 KLMK 131234 PNSLMK INZ076>079-083-084-089>092-KYZ023>043-045>049-053>057-061>067- 070>078-081-082-020745- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE LOUISVILLE KY 820 AM EDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...LEXINGTON WEATHER RADIO IS OFF THE AIR... NOAA WEATHER RADIO KIH41 IN LEXINGTON IS OFF THE AIR. REPAIRS ARE IN PROGRESS. IN THE MEANTIME RESIDENTS IN THE BLUEGRASS REGION CAN TUNE TO FRANKFORT NWR WHICH IS ON 162.500 MHZ AND THE OWENTON TRANSMITTER ON 162.450 MHZ. YOU CAN ALSO GO TO OUR WEBSITE AT WWW.WEATHER.GOV/LOUISVILLE . $$ SZAPPANOS  935 NOUS41 KBUF 131255 PNSBUF NYZ001>008-010>014-019>021-085-140000- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BUFFALO NY 800 AM EDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...TODAY IS HEAT AWARENESS DAY IN NEW YORK... TODAY IS HEAT AWARENESS DAY IN NEW YORK STATE. CONSIDERING THE HARMFUL EFFECTS OF EXTREME HEAT...IT IS IMPORTANT THAT NEW YORK RESIDENTS AND VISITORS UNDERSTAND THE DANGERS OF EXTREME HEAT. PEOPLE SUFFER HEAT RELATED ILLNESS...AND DEATH...WHEN THE BODYS TEMPERATURE CONTROL SYSTEM IS OVERLOADED. NORMALLY...THE BODY COOLS ITSELF BY SWEATING. BUT UNDER SOME CONDITIONS...SWEATING JUST IS NOT ENOUGH. IN SUCH CASES...A PERSONS BODY TEMPERATURE RISES RAPIDLY...AND VITAL ORGANS ARE THREATENED. ON AVERAGE...160 AMERICANS SUCCUMB TO HEAT EACH YEAR. NEARLY 600 PEOPLE WERE KILLED IN CHICAGO DURING THE 1995 HEAT WAVE AND 42 PEOPLE PERISHED IN 2006 IN NEW YORK CITY DURING AN AUGUST HEAT WAVE. DESPITE ITS NORTHERN LOCATION...NEW YORK IS NOT IMMUNE TO THE LIFE THREATENING EFFECTS OF EXTREME HEAT. EACH SUMMER...NEW YORK EXPERIENCES ITS SHARE OF HOT...HUMID WEATHER...CONDITIONS IDEAL FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF HEAT RELATED ILLNESS. THOSE MOST AT RISK FROM HEAT RELATED ILLNESSES ARE THE ELDERLY... INFANTS LESS THAN ONE YEAR OLD...THOSE EXPOSED TO HIGH TEMPERATURES IN THE WORK PLACE...THE CHRONICALLY ILL OR BED RIDDEN...THE MENTALLY ILL...THOSE ON CERTAIN DRUGS...AND THOSE RESIDING IN URBAN AREAS. THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE HAS DEVELOPED THE HEAT INDEX TO MEASURE HEAT SEVERITY. THE HEAT INDEX...GIVEN IN DEGREES FAHRENHEIT...PROVIDES A MEASURE OF HOW HOT IT REALLY FEELS WHEN THE EFFECT OF HUMIDITY IS CONSIDERED. REMEMBER...HEAT INDEX VALUES ARE COMPUTED FOR SHADY...LIGHT WIND CONDITIONS. EXPOSURE TO FULL SUNSHINE CAN INCREASE THE INDEX VALUES BY 15 DEGREES OR MORE. FURTHERMORE...STRONG WINDS...PARTICULARLY WITH HOT...DRY AIR CAN BE VERY DANGEROUS. WHEN EXTREME HEAT THREATENS...THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE WILL ISSUE ONE OF THE FOLLOWING APPROPRIATE ALERTS... AN EXCESSIVE HEAT WARNING...WHEN THE HEAT INDEX IS EXPECTED TO EQUAL OR EXCEED 105 DEGREES FOR TWO OR MORE HOURS. AN EXCESSIVE HEAT WATCH...WHEN THE POSSIBILITY EXISTS FOR THE HEAT INDEX TO REACH WARNING CRITERIA. A HEAT ADVISORY...WHEN THE HEAT INDEX IS EXPECTED TO BE 100 TO 104 FOR TWO HOURS OR MORE. GIVEN THE EXPECTED HEAT INDEX VALUES...THE FOLLOWING HEAT DISORDERS ARE LIKELY... 130 DEGREES OR HIGHER...HEATSTROKE 105 TO 130 DEGREES...HEAT CRAMPS...HEAT EXHAUSTION...AND POSSIBLY HEATSTROKE WITH PROLONGED EXPOSURE AND/OR PHYSICAL ACTIVITY. 90 TO 105 DEGREES...HEAT CRAMPS...AND HEAT EXHAUSTION POSSIBLE WITH PROLONGED EXPOSURE AND/OR PHYSICAL ACTIVITY 80 TO 90 DEGREES...FATIGUE POSSIBLE WITH PROLONGED EXPOSURE AND/OR PHYSICAL ACTIVITY. THE BEST DEFENSE AGAINST HEAT RELATED ILLNESS IS PREVENTION. STAYING COOL...AND MAKING SIMPLE CHANGES IN YOUR FLUID INTAKE...ACTIVITIES... AND CLOTHING DURING HOT...HUMID WEATHER CAN HELP YOU REMAIN SAFE AND HEALTHY. THE U. S. CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION OFFER THE FOLLOWING TIPS WHEN HOT...HUMID WEATHER THREATENS... INCREASE FLUID INTAKE...EVEN BEFORE YOU FEEL THIRSTY...BUT CHECK WITH YOUR DOCTOR IF YOU MUST RESTRICT FLUID INTAKE. SLOW DOWN...REDUCE...ELIMINATE...OR RESCHEDULE STRENUOUS ACTIVITY...INCLUDING EXERCISE...IF POSSIBLE. REMAIN INDOORS IN AN AIR CONDITIONED ENVIRONMENT. IF OUTDOORS...AVOID THE MIDDAY SUN...AND PLAN YOUR ACTIVITIES DURING THE COOLER EARLY MORNING OR EVENING HOURS. WEAR LIGHTWEIGHT...LIGHT COLORED...LOOSE FITTING CLOTHING. ...NEVER LEAVE ANYONE OR ANY PET IN A CLOSED...PARKED VEHICLE. CHECK FREQUENTLY ON THOSE MOST AT RISK FROM HEAT RELATED ILLNESS. ALWAYS BE ALERT FOR THE WARNING SIGNS OF HEAT EXHAUSTION AND HEAT STROKE. HEAT EXHAUSTION IS THE BODYS RESPONSE TO AN EXCESSIVE LOSS OF WATER AND SALT CONTAINED IN SWEAT. WARNING SIGNS INCLUDE...HEAVY SWEATING...MUSCLE CRAMPS...WEAKNESS...DIZZINESS...COLD AND OR PALE CLAMMY SKIN...HEADACHE...NAUSEA OR VOMITING...AND FAINTING. IF A PERSON EXHIBITS SYMPTOMS OF HEAT EXHAUSTION...THEN THE FOLLOWING TREATMENT SHOULD BE ADMINISTERED... GET THE VICTIM OUT OF THE SUN IMMEDIATELY. LAY THE VICTIM DOWN AND LOOSEN CLOTHING. APPLY COOL...WET CLOTHS. GIVE SIPS OF WATER...UNLESS NAUSEA OCCURS. AND IF THE VICTIM FAILS TO RESPOND TO THESE EFFORTS WITHIN AN HOUR...SEEK MEDICAL ATTENTION IMMEDIATELY. REMEMBER...IF LEFT UNTREATED...HEAT EXHAUSTION MAY PROGRESS TO HEAT STROKE. HEAT STROKE OCCURS WHEN THE BODY BECOMES UNABLE TO CONTROL ITS TEMPERATURE. THE BODYS TEMPERATURE RISES RAPIDLY...SWEATING FAILS...AND THE BODY IS UNABLE TO COOL DOWN. BODY TEMPERATURE MAY RISE TO 106 DEGREES OR HIGHER WITHIN 10 TO 15 MINUTES. HEAT STROKE CAN CAUSE PERMANENT DISABILITY OR DEATH IF EMERGENCY TREATMENT IS NOT QUICKLY RENDERED. WARNING SIGNS OF HEAT STROKE INCLUDE...AN EXTREMELY HIGH BODY TEMPERATURE...GREATER THAN 103 DEGREES MEASURED ORALLY...RED HOT AND DRY SKIN...RAPID STRONG PULSE... THROBBING HEADACHE...DIZZINESS...NAUSEA...VOMITING...CONFUSION... UNCONSCIOUSNESS... IF A PERSON EXHIBITS SYMPTOMS OF HEAT STROKE...THEN THE FOLLOWING TREATMENT SHOULD BE ADMINISTERED... -SUMMON IMMEDIATE MEDICAL ASSISTANCE. -GET THE VICTIM TO A SHADY AREA. -COOL THE VICTIM RAPIDLY USING WHATEVER METHODS ARE AVAILABLE... SUCH AS A COOL BATH OR SPONGE. -IF POSSIBLE...MONITOR BODY TEMPERATURE...AND CONTINUE COOLING EFFORTS UNTIL THE BODY TEMPERATURE DROPS TO 101 TO 102 DEGREES. -DO NOT GIVE FLUIDS. KEEP IN MIND...WARM...SUNNY WEATHER IS WHAT MAKES NEW YORK SUMMERS SO DELIGHTFUL FOR RESIDENTS AND VISITORS. BUT...WHEN THE TEMPERATURE GETS TOO HOT...THE HUMIDITY TOO HIGH...AND THE SUN TOO INTENSE...NEW YORKS DELIGHTFUL SUMMER CAN TURN INTO A KILLER. $$ LEVAN  300 NOUS44 KMEG 131341 PNSMEG TNZ003-019>021-050>055-090>092-131700- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE MEMPHIS TN 841 AM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...THE JACKSON NOAA WEATHER RADIO TRANSMITTER BROADCASTING AT 162.550 MHZ WILL BE UNDERGOING MAINTENANCE THIS MORNING AND SHOULD BE BACK UP BY NOON CDT TODAY... $$ SJM  663 NOUS43 KLMK 131401 PNSLMK INZ076>079-083-084-089>092-KYZ023>043-045>049-053>057-061>067- 070>078-081-082-020745- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE LOUISVILLE KY 1000 AM EDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...LEXINGTON WEATHER RADIO IS BACK ON THE AIR... $$ SZAPPANOS  297 NOUS43 KSGF 131425 PNSSGF KSZ073-097-101-MOZ055>058-066>071-077>083-088>098-101>106-141425- VOLUNTEER WEATHER OBSERVATION REPORT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SPRINGFIELD MO 925 AM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 MAX MIN COUNTY LOCATION TEMP TEMP PRECIP SIGNIFICANT WEATHER BARRY ROARING RIVER SP 84 66 0.00 BENTON EDWARDS 6W 81 69 0.00 JASPER SARCOXIE 1W 87 67 0.04 LACLEDE 1 SE MORGAN 81 63 T MORGAN GRAVOIS MILLS 79 66 0.00 STONE CRANE 4N 84 68 0.13 TANEY RIDGEDALE 4W 86 70 0.02 WEBSTER NIANGUA 81 64 0.00 $$  126 NOUS43 KBIS 131437 PNSBIS NDZ001>005-009>013-017>023-025-031>037-040>048-050-051-131800- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 937 AM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 /837 AM MDT MON JUN 13 2011/ ...PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT... THE BISMARCK RADAR WILL BE DOWN FOR MAINTENANCE UNTIL 1 PM MONDAY AFTERNOON. $$  609 NOUS43 KBIS 131442 RRA PNSBIS NDZ035-131745- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 945 AM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...STAGE OF THE MISSOURI RIVER AT BISMARCK... AT 915 AM CDT MONDAY...THE MISSOURI RIVER STAGE WAS 17.85 FEET. $$ WAA  351 NOUS41 KCTP 131449 PNSCTP PAZ004>006-010>012-017>019-024>028-033>037-041-042-045-046-049>053- 056>059-063>066-131900- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE STATE COLLEGE PA 1049 AM EDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...SCHEDULED NOAA WEATHER RADIO OUTAGE... MAINTENANCE WILL BE PERFORMED ON THE NOAA WEATHER RADIO BROADCASTING SYSTEM TODAY. ALL NOAA WEATHER RADIO STATIONS WHICH ARE BROADCAST FROM THE NWS OFFICE IN STATE COLLEGE WILL HAVE THEIR BROADCASTS INTERRUPTED FOR A FEW HOURS. $$ JAK  792 NOUS43 KMPX 131501 PNSMPX WIZ025>028-141515- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE TWIN CITIES/CHANHASSEN MN 1001 AM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT... TO: SUBSCRIBERS: -FAMILY OF SERVICES -NOAA WEATHER WIRE SERVICE -EMERGENCY MANAGERS WEATHER INFORMATION NETWORK OTHER NWS PARTNERS...USERS AND EMPLOYEES FROM: DANIEL LUNA METEOROLOGIST IN CHARGE WEATHER FORECAST OFFICE CHANHASSEN MN SUBJECT: CHANGE TODAY...MONDAY JUNE 13 2011...OF MAJOR FLOOD STAGE FOR THE RIVER GAUGE AT EAU CLAIRE WI /ECLW3/ ON THE CHIPPEWA RIVER MAJOR FLOOD STAGE AT EAU CLAIRE WISCONSIN ON THE CHIPPEWA RIVER CHANGES FROM 777 FEET TO 778 FEET TODAY...JUNE 13TH 2011. DUE TO LIMITATIONS WITH THE WEBSITE INTERFACE...THE CHANGE WILL NOT APPEAR ON THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ADVANCED HYDROLOGIC PREDICTION SERVICE OR AHPS WEB PAGES UNTIL TUESDAY JUNE 14TH 2011. RECENT MITIGATION WORK PERFORMED IN EAU CLAIRE HAS HELPED TO DECREASE THE IMPACTS OF THE CHIPPEWA RIVER AT THE CURRENT MAJOR FLOOD STAGE OF 777 FEET. AFTER EVALUATION FROM THE SEPTEMBER 2010 FLOOD WHICH THE CREST WAS 777.8 FEET ON SEPTEMBER 25TH...EAU CLAIRE CITY OFFICIALS IN COLLABORATION WITH THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IDENTIFIED THAT THE IMPACTS EXPERIENCED DID NOT MEET THE DESCRIPTION OF A MAJOR FLOOD. MAJOR FLOOD STAGE IS DEFINED AS THE LEVEL THAT EXTENSIVE INUNDATION OF STRUCTURES AND ROADS AND SIGNIFICANT EVACUATIONS OF PEOPLE AND OR TRANSFER OF PROPERTY TO HIGHER ELEVATIONS WOULD BEGIN TO OCCUR. THIS GROUP FURTHER IDENTIFIED THAT A MORE APPROPRIATE MAJOR FLOOD STAGE...BASED ON POTENTIAL IMPACTS TO THE HOMES ALONG FIRST STREET WOULD BE 778 FEET. FLOOD STAGE OF 773 FEET AND MODERATE FLOOD STAGE OF 776 FEET WILL REMAIN THE SAME. A SUMMARY OF THE CHANGE IS: MAJOR FLOOD STAGE WAS 777 FEET ABOVE GAGE ZERO. MAJOR FLOOD STAGE IS NOW 778 FEET ABOVE GAGE ZERO. IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS ON THESE PROPOSED CHANGES...PLEASE CONTACT: DIANE COOPER SERVICE HYDROLOGIST NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST OFFICE TWIN CITIES MN 1733 LAKE DRIVE WEST CHANHASSEN, MN 55317-8581 952-368-2542 E-MAIL: DIANE.COOPER@NOAA.GOV JOHN GENSKOW PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT CITY OF EAU CLAIRE, WISCONSIN 715-839-4934 E-MAIL: JOHN.GENSKOW@CI.EAU-CLAIRE.WI.US JAMES M./MEL/ ERICKSON DIRECTOR EAU CLAIRE COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT 721 OXFORD AVE EAU CLARE, WI 54703 715-839-4741 E-MAIL: MEL.ERICKSON@CO.EAU-CLAIRE.WI.US $$ DFC  563 NOUS43 KFSD 131511 PNSFSD SDZ001>074-141510- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SIOUX FALLS SD 1010 AM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 24 HOUR PRECIPITATION DATA IN INCHES...FOR SOUTH DAKOTA ...RECEIVED BY 9 AM MONDAY JUNE 13 2011. LOCATION RAINFALL PRESHO 8.6 SW 1.65 MISSION 1.57 FORT PIERRE RAWS 1.23 KENNEBEC 0.3 SE 1.21 SIOUX FALLS 1.9 SSW 1.03 KENNEBEC 6.2 SSE 0.99 PRESHO 0.3 SSW 0.97 MURDO 0.90 PARKSTON 6.6 S 0.87 PRESHO 13.8 NW 0.86 BUFFALO 0.83 VIVIAN 5.1 SSW 0.81 PARMALEE RAWS 0.81 BELLE FOURCHE 0.80 MARTIN 13.2 W 0.76 BURKE 10.5 SSE 0.74 HITCHCOCK 7.5 WSW 0.73 WANBLEE 3.5 WSW 0.69 OKATON 2.6 NW 0.67 HARTFORD 6.4 S 0.66 DIMOCK 10.2 W 0.66 MONTROSE 5.8 NW 0.65 DALLAS 8.8 S 0.64 HERRICK 8.2 SSW 0.64 BURKE 4.2 SW 0.61 PRESHO 11.6 NNE 0.61 WINNER 0.61 OACOMA 17.4 SSW 0.60 PLATTE 13.7 W 0.59 HERRICK 0.1 NNW 0.59 HOT SPRINGS 0.5 SSW 0.59 HERRICK 4.5 NW 0.59 ARMOUR 4.6 W 0.59 MITCHELL 5.8 S 0.57 VICTOR 0.57 BROOKINGS 8.1 S 0.56 YANKTON 0.55 RELIANCE 0.1 ESE 0.54 WATERTOWN 4.1 WSW 0.54 TULARE 4.5 SSW 0.53 BROOKINGS 2.8 SSW 0.52 OELRICHS 11.8 SSW 0.50 PARKER 6.8 WSW 0.50 INTERIOR 15.9 SSE 0.50 WATERTOWN 1.1 NNW 0.49 SIOUX FALLS 3.4 WSW 0.48 WATERTOWN 2.7 E 0.47 MARION 0.5 NE 0.46 LOWRY 1.1 WNW 0.45 WATERTOWN 0.45 ONIDA 3.7 W 0.44 SIOUX FALLS AIRPORT 0.44 BROOKINGS 1.4 SW 0.43 SISSETON 3.8 W 0.43 HOWARD 5.3 W 0.43 PUKWANA 1.9 S 0.42 ONIDA 0.2 N 0.42 WILMONT 0.42 PRESHO 7.7 NNE 0.40 GREGORY 8.7 N 0.40 LEAD 0.39 OACOMA 5.8 SW 0.38 PICKSTOWN 0.38 WESSINGTON RAWS 0.37 KADOKA 0.3 N 0.36 SISSETON 10.4 ENE 0.36 MITCHELL 1.7 SSE 0.35 MIDLAND 1.6 ENE 0.35 HERREID 3.6 ESE 0.33 GAYVILLE 1.8 SSW 0.33 SPEARFISH 0.1 WSW 0.32 WHITEWOOD 4.2 NNW 0.32 SISSETON 0.32 GANN VALLEY 7.8 WNW 0.31 WARNER 3.4 SE 0.31 ASTORIA 0.31 ABERDEEN WFO 0.31 CARTHAGE 0.30 BROOKINGS 1.1 S 0.29 ABERDEEN 7.5 SE 0.28 ASTORIA 2.2 SSE 0.27 CHAMBERLAIN 0.27 HIGHMORE 12.4 N 0.26 ABERDEEN 7.4 NNE 0.26 CLAREMONT 2.4 SSE 0.26 HIGHMORE 19.1 NNW 0.25 ONIDA 1.6 SSE 0.25 KADOKA 2.8 WNW 0.25 CLARK 0.25 IROQUOIS 5.2 SSW 0.24 ROSCOE 0.3 NNW 0.24 ROY LAKE 0.24 EDGEMONT 0.24 MITCHELL 0.24 MITCHELL 1.1 N 0.23 MOBRIDGE 0.23 MOBRIDGE 8.0 NNW 0.22 WHITE LAKE 0.22 PINNACLES RAWS 0.22 ABERDEEN 1.0 NNE 0.21 CHAMBERLAIN 0.3 W 0.21 ROSCOE 0.21 WHITE LAKE 10.9 S 0.20 WHITE 0.1 S 0.20 WALL 13.0 SSE 0.19 CREIGHTON 2.7 S 0.19 EDGEMONT 2.2 ENE 0.19 PIERRE 0.19 PIERRE 1.3 S 0.18 MANSFIELD 0.1 NW 0.18 LEMMON 11.2 SW 0.18 ABERDEEN 1.5 SSW 0.17 BROOKINGS 0.17 PINE RIDGE 0.15 PHILIP 0.14 NEWELL 3.7 SW 0.12 LEAD 5.5 SSW 0.11 MCLAUGHLIN 10.1 ENE 0.10 SHADEHILL 0.10 HURON AIRPORT 0.10 HARTFORD 0.5 N 0.09 TIMBER LAKE 1.8 W 0.06 MCINTOSH 8.7 WSW 0.05 HERMOSA 0.3 ENE 0.05 CUSTER RAWS 0.05 RAPID CITY 9.8 SW 0.02 RAPID CITY 3.4 WNW 0.01 FAITH 0.01 CUSTER 0.01 RAPID CITY AIRPORT T RAPID CITY WFO T .END... $$  918 NOUS43 KFSD 131515 PNSFSD IAZ001>003-012>014-020>022-031-032-MNZ071-072-080-081-089-090-097-098 -NEZ013-014-SDZ038>040-050-052>071-141510- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SIOUX FALLS SD 1010 AM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 24 HOUR PRECIPITATION DATA IN INCHES...FOR SOUTHEAST SOUTH DAKOTA... SOUTHWEST MINNESOTA...NORTHWEST IOWA...AND NORTHEAST NEBRASKA ...RECEIVED BY 9 AM MONDAY JUNE 13 2011. ...SOUTHEAST SOUTH DAKOTA... PARKSTON 7S 0.87 YANKTON COOP 0.75 HARTFORD 6.4S 0.66 DIMOCK 10W 0.66 MONTROSE 5.8NW 0.65 HERRICK 9.6SW 0.64 DALLAS 8.8S 0.64 BURKE 4SW 0.61 HERRICK 0.1NNW 0.59 HERRICK 3NW 0.59 ARMOUR 4.6W 0.59 PLATTE 14W 0.59 MITCHELL 5.8S 0.57 BROOKINGS 8S 0.56 YANKTON AIRPORT 0.55 BROOKINGS 2.8SSW 0.52 BROOKINGS COOP 0.52 SIOUX FALLS AIRPORT 0.51 PARKER 6.8WSW 0.50 SIOUX FALLS 3.4WSW 0.48 MARION 0.5NE 0.46 BROOKINGS 1.4SW 0.43 GREGORY 8.7S 0.40 PICKSTOWN 0.38 WESSINGTON RAWS 0.37 SIOUX FALLS 5.2SW 0.35 MITCHELL 1.7SSE 0.35 EROS DATA CENTER 0.35 GAYVILLE 1.8SSW 0.33 ASTORIA 0.31 CARTHAGE 0.30 ASTORIA 2.2SSE 0.27 CHAMBERLAIN 0.27 MITCHELL 0.24 MITCHELL 1.1N 0.23 WHITE LAKE 0.22 CHAMBERLAIN 0.3W 0.21 WHITE LAKE 11S 0.20 VERMILLION 0.18 BROOKINGS AIRPORT 0.17 HURON COOP 0.12 HURON AIRPORT 0.10 HARTFORD 0.09 ...SOUTHWEST MINNESOTA... LAKEFIELD 0.16 JACKSON AIRPORT 0.11 WORTHINGTON COOP 0.09 PIPESTONE 0.05 WORTHINGTON AIRPORT 0.04 LUVERNE AIRPORT 0.03 SLAYTON 0.01 WINDOM AIRPORT T ...NORTHWEST IOWA... SIOUX CITY 0.71 ROCK VALLEY COOP 0.30 LE MARS 0.15 CHEROKEE 1SSE 0.08 HOLSTEIN COOP 0.08 CLEGHORN 4.4N 0.06 ORANGE CITY 0.06 STORM LAKE 0.05 SPENCER AIRPORT 0.02 SHELDON COOP T BATTLE CREEK 3NE T .END... $$  648 NOUS43 KPAH 131521 PNSPAH PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE PADUCAH KY 1022 AM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...SAFETY RULES FOR SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS - FOR MEDIA TO BROADCAST... A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH HAS BEEN ISSUED BY THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FOR PARTS OF SOUTHEAST MISSOURI. THESE SAFETY TIPS ARE BEING PROVIDED IN HOPE THAT THE BROADCAST MEDIA WILL FREQUENTLY BROADCAST THESE MESSAGES WHILE THE WATCH AFFECTS THEIR AREA. A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH MEANS CONDITIONS ARE FAVORABLE FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN AND CLOSE TO THE WATCH AREA. IF YOU ARE IN THE WATCH AREA...KEEP UP TO DATE OF THE LATEST WEATHER INFORMATION. THESE STORMS CAN DEVELOP RAPIDLY SO THERE MAY BE OCCASIONS WHEN ADVANCE WARNING IS NOT POSSIBLE. A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WARNING MEANS A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM HAS BEEN OBSERVED OR INDICATED BY RADAR. IF YOU ARE IN THE PATH OR NEAR THE STORM...TAKE IMMEDIATE ACTIONS TO PROTECT LIFE AND PROPERTY. FOLLOW THESE SAFETY RULES: 1) IN OPEN COUNTRY...YOU SHOULD SEEK SHELTER AND AVOID TREES WHICH CAN BE TARGETS FOR LIGHTNING. IF THERE IS NO SHELTER...GO TO A DITCH OR CULVERT BUT BEWARE OF RISING WATER WHICH CAN CAUSE FLOODING. 2) WHEN INDOORS...STAY AWAY FROM OUTSIDE WALLS AND WINDOWS AND GO TO AN INTERIOR ROOM ON THE LOWEST LEVEL. AVOID USING ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES WHILE THE STORM IS NEARBY. 3) IN MOBILE HOMES...YOU SHOULD LEAVE AND SEEK NEARBY SAFE SHELTER. 4) IF SWIMMING OR ON A BOAT...YOU SHOULD GET TO SHORE AS QUICKLY AS POSSIBLE AND FIND SHELTER. A THUNDERSTORM IS CONSIDERED SEVERE WHEN IT CONTAINS 3/4 INCH OR LARGER DIAMETER SIZE HAIL AND/OR WIND GUSTS OF 58 MILES AN HOUR OR GREATER. A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM ALSO PRODUCES DEADLY LIGHTNING AND VERY HEAVY RAIN WHICH CAN LEAD TO FLASH FLOODING. REMEMBER...WITH ANY SEVERE THUNDERSTORM THERE IS ALWAYS THE POSSIBILITY OF TORNADOES. $$  708 NOUS41 KWBC 131552 PNSWSH Technical Implementation Notice 11-10, Amended National Weather Service Headquarters Washington DC 1152 AM EDT Mon Jun 12 2011 To: Subscribers: -Family of Services -NOAA Weather Wire Service -Emergency Managers Weather Information Network -NOAAPORT Other NWS Partners, Users and Employees From: Tim McClung Chief, Science Plans Branch Office of Science and Technology Subject: Amended: Change to Wave Model Products: Effective Date Postponed Amended to postpone the implementation of this change. Additional testing is needed on these changes and a new implementation date will be announced once it has been determined. Effective on a date to be determined, beginning with the 1200 Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) run, the National Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP) will modify the spectral output grid products from the Multi-grid Global Wave and Hurricane Wave Models. Both of these models are run using WAVEWATCH-III v3.14. Recent upgrades of the model to v3.14 increased the spectral resolution of the model from a 25x24 spectral domain (frequency and direction) to a 50x36 domain. For backward compatibility, however, the spectral output from the model was kept at 25x24. This upgrade will change the spectral output to match the internal model domain. The key changes are as follows: 1. The frequency spectrum will now start from 0.035 (instead of 0.0412) 2. The logarithmic increment will now be 1.07 (as opposed to 1.1). i.e., the next frequency will be 7% higher as opposed to 10% higher earlier. 3. There will be 50 frequency components as opposed to the earlier 25 frequency components (with the highest resolved frequency being 0.963 as opposed to 0.406 earlier) 4. There will be 36 directional components as opposed to the 24 directional components earlier. This means that the directional resolution will now be 10 degrees as opposed to 15 degrees earlier The spectral output files from these models are disseminated via the NCEP server at http://www.ftp.ncep.noaa.gov/data/nccf/com/wave/prod/ and ftp://ftp.ncep.noaa.gov/pub/data/nccf/com/wave/prod/ The following files will be affected: akw.txxz.spec_tar enp.txxz.spec_tar multi_1.txxz.spec_tar multi_2.txxz.spec_tar nah.txxz.spec_tar nph.txxz.spec_tar wna.txxz.spec_tar where xx is the model cycle. This change will not affect the non-spectral output files from these models. The spectral products that are changing are not available on NOAAPORT or in AWIPS. Sample output files reflecting this spectral resolution change are available at: ftp://polar.ncep.noaa.gov/pub/waves/develop/ Details about the NCEP Multi-grid Wave Models are online at: http://polar.ncep.noaa.gov/waves/index2.shtml For questions regarding these model changes, please contact: Hendrik Tolman NCEP/Marine Modeling and Analysis Branch Camp Springs, Maryland 301-763-8000 ext 7253 hendrik.tolman@noaa.gov For questions regarding the dataflow aspects of these data sets, please contact: Rebecca Cosgrove NCEP/NCO Dataflow Team Camp Springs, Maryland 20746 301-763-8000 x 7198 ncep.list.pmb-dataflow@noaa.gov NWS National Technical Implementation Notices are online at: http://www.nws.noaa.gov/os/notif.htm $$  948 NOUS42 KRAH 131610 PNSRAH NCZ021>023-038-039-132100- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE RALEIGH NC 1210 PM EDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...NOAA WEATHER RADIO OFF THE AIR... WXL-42...LOCATED IN GREENSBORO...SERVING NORTHWEST NORTH CAROLINA AND ADJACENT VIRGINIA COUNTIES ON 162.400 MHZ MAY EXPERIENCE SOME INTERMITTENT OUTAGES AS MAINTAINENCE IS BEING DONE ON THE TRANSMITTER. WE APOLOGIZE FOR THE INCONVENIENCE. $$  508 NOUS43 KFSD 131610 PNSFSD IAZ001>003-012>014-020>022-031-032-MNZ071-072-080-081-089- 090-097-098-NEZ013-014-SDZ038>040-050-052>071-141609- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SIOUX FALLS SD 1109 AM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...SIOUX FALLS CLIMATE DATA UP TO 11 AM CDT... HIGH TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 65 LOW TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 57 PRECIPITATION SINCE MIDNIGHT..... 0.52 ...HURON CLIMATE DATA UP TO 11 AM CDT... HIGH TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 67 LOW TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 60 PRECIPITATION SINCE MIDNIGHT..... 0.10 ...SIOUX CITY CLIMATE DATA UP TO 11 AM CDT... HIGH TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 64 LOW TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 58 PRECIPITATION SINCE MIDNIGHT..... 0.76 MISSOURI RIVER STAGE............. 33.16 $$  804 NOUS41 KPHI 131622 PNSPHI NJZ010-012>015-019-020-026-027-132200- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE MOUNT HOLLY NJ 1222 PM EDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...NOAA WEATHER RADIO ALL HAZARDS OUTAGE... THE NOAA WEATHER RADIO ALL HAZARDS TRANSMITTER LOCATED IN HOWELL, NEW JERSEY IS OFF THE AIR. TECHNICIANS ARE WORKING ON THE PROBLEM. WE APOLOGIZE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE THIS OUTAGE MAY CAUSE. $$ MEOLA  918 NOUS42 KTAE 131655 PNSTAE FLZ011-013-016-026-GAZ155-156-141100- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE TALLAHASSEE FL 1255 PM EDT MON JUN 13 2011 /1155 AM CDT MON JUN 13 2011/ ...EMERGENCY MAINTENANCE SCHEDULED FOR TONIGHT THAT WILL IMPACT THE SNEADS NOAA WEATHER RADIO BROADCAST... VERIZON PLANS TO DO SOME EMERGENCY MAINTENANCE WORK SOMETIME TONIGHT THAT WILL RESULT IN THE SNEADS BROADCAST BEING OFF THE AIR FOR AROUND 30 MINUTES. THE MAINTENANCE WINDOW IS ANY TIME BETWEEN 7 PM AND 6 AM CDT...BUT MOST LIKELY BETWEEN 4 AND 5 AM CDT TUESDAY. WE REGRET ANY INCONVENIENCE. $$ 18-WOOL  206 NOAK49 PAFG 131700 PNSAFG AKZ222-140500- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FAIRBANKS AK 900 AM AKDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...WEEKLY WEATHER SUMMARY FOR FAIRBANKS ALASKA... OBSERVED LAST WEEK...06/05/2011 TO 06/11/2011 OBSERVED NORMAL DEPARTURE AVG MAX TEMP (F) 68.1 68.0 0.1 AVG MIN TEMP (F) 47.4 47.0 0.4 AVG TEMP (F) 57.8 57.5 0.3 TOTAL PRECIP (IN) 0.24 0.29 -0.05 TOTAL SNOWFALL (IN) 0.0 0.0 0.0 NORMALS FOR THIS WEEK...06/12/2011 TO 06/18/2011 NORMAL AVG MAX TEMP (F) 69.9 AVG MIN TEMP(F) 49.3 AVG TEMP (F) 59.6 TOTAL PRECIP (IN) 0.35 TOTAL SNOW (IN) 0.0 $$  934 NOUS45 KPUB 131703 PNSPUB COZ058>089-093>099-140515- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE PUEBLO CO 1103 AM MDT MON JUN 13 2011 THE FOLLOWING IS A LIST OF SOME THUNDERSTORM SAFETY RULES THAT CAN BE PASSED ALONG TO RESIDENTS OF...AND VISITORS TO...SOUTHERN COLORADO. IF YOU PLAN TO BE OUTDOORS...CHECK THE LATEST WEATHER INFORMATION. IF THUNDERSTORMS ARE IN THE FORECAST...YOU MAY WANT TO CURTAIL OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES. IF YOU ARE OUTDOORS AND HEAR THUNDER...YOU SHOULD IMMEDIATELY GET INDOORS INTO A SUBSTANTIAL BUILDING...OR GET INTO ANY HARD TOPPED VEHICLE. LIGHTNING CAN STRIKE SEVERAL MILES AWAY FROM THE STORM... WHERE IT IS NOT RAINING AND WHERE YOU MAY BE. IN COLORADO...LIGHTNING CAN OCCUR WITH THUNDERSTORMS THAT PRODUCE LITTLE...IF ANY...RAIN. DO NOT WAIT TOO LONG TO TAKE ACTION. DEADLY LIGHTNING CAN OCCUR WITH ALL THUNDERSTORMS. WAIT 30 MINUTES UNTIL THE LAST RUMBLE OF THUNDER BEFORE RESUMING OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES. IF YOU ARE CAUGHT OUTDOORS DURING A LIGHTNING STORM...AND THERE IS NO SAFE SHELTER NEARBY...THERE IS NOT MUCH YOU CAN DO TO REDUCE YOUR RISK OF BEING STRUCK BY LIGHTNING. THE BEST THING TO DO IS FIND A LOW SPOT AND STAY AWAY FROM TREES. IF YOU ARE IN THE MOUNTAINS AND ARE ABOVE TIMBERLINE...GO TO A LOWER AREA. IF YOU ARE BELOW TIMBERLINE...TRY TO FIND AN OPEN AREA AWAY FROM TREES. IF YOU ARE IN AN AREA OF DENSE TREES...DO YOUR BEST TO STAY AWAY FROM THE TALLEST TREES. IF YOU ARE IN A GROUP...STAY APART. IF SOMEONE IS STRUCK... OTHERS WILL BE ABLE TO HELP THE VICTIM. REMEMBER...WHEN THUNDER ROARS...GO INDOORS. $$  451 NOUS44 KBMX 131727 PNSBMX ALZ011>015-017>050-13235900- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BIRMINGHAM AL 1225 AM CDT MON JUN 12 2011 ...COLUMBUS GEORGIA WEATHER RADIO OFF AIR... THE COLUMBUS GEORGIA WEATHER RADIO SERVING RUSSELL COUNTY ALABAMA IS OFF THE AIR...EFFORTS TO RESTORE SERVICE CONTINUE. $$  129 NOUS44 KBMX 131728 PNSBMX ALZ011>015-017>050-132359- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BIRMINGHAM AL 1225 AM CDT MON JUN 12 2011 ...COLUMBUS GEORGIA WEATHER RADIO OFF AIR... THE COLUMBUS GEORGIA WEATHER RADIO SERVING RUSSELL COUNTY ALABAMA IS OFF THE AIR...EFFORTS TO RESTORE SERVICE CONTINUE. $$  076 NOUS43 KBIS 131735 RRA PNSBIS NDZ035-132045- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 1235 PM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...STAGE OF THE MISSOURI RIVER AT BISMARCK... AT 1215 PM CDT MONDAY...THE MISSOURI RIVER STAGE WAS 17.86 FEET. $$ WAA  822 NOUS44 KBMX 131737 PNSBMX ALZ011>015-017>050-132359- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BIRMINGHAM AL 1230 PM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...COLUMBUS GEORGIA WEATHER RADIO OFF AIR... THE COLUMBUS GEORGIA WEATHER RADIO SERVING RUSSELL COUNTY ALABAMA IS OFF THE AIR...EFFORTS TO RESTORE SERVICE CONTINUE. $$  216 NOUS46 KLOX 131753 PNSLOX PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE LOS ANGELES/OXNARD CA 1050 AM PDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...SOUTHWESTERN CALIFORNIA WEATHER SUMMARY FOR MAY 2011... MAY WAS A RELATIVELY WET MONTH ACROSS SOUTHWESTERN CALIFORNIA...WITH MOST LOCATIONS REPORTING RAINFALL OF 150 TO 250 PERCENT OF NORMAL. HOWEVER...SINCE RAINFALL IS TYPICALLY LESS THAN ONE HALF AN INCH IN MOST AREAS...RELATIVELY SMALL DIFFERENCES IN RAINFALL MADE FOR LARGE DIFFERENCES IN THE PERCENTAGE OF NORMAL RAINFALL AT EACH LOCATION. TEMPERATURES FOR THE MONTH AVERAGED 1 TO 3 DEGREES BELOW NORMAL... EXCEPT MORE THAN 4 DEGREES BELOW NORMAL IN THE ANTELOPE VALLEY AND THE MOUNTAINS. COMPARED TO APRIL...WHICH WAS GENERALLY SLIGHTLY WARMER THAN NORMAL...AVERAGE TEMPERATURES CHANGED VERY LITTLE IN MOST AREAS IN MAY. LOCAL FREEZING TEMPERATURES OCCURRED IN THE MOUNTAINS...THE ANTELOPE VALLEY AND IN THE INTERIOR VALLEYS OF SAN LUIS OBISPO COUNTY ON THE 1ST DAY OF THE MONTH. THE MONTH STARTED OFF ON A BREEZY NOTE...THANKS TO A COLD FRONT WHICH PUSHED THROUGH THE REGION AT THE END OF APRIL. GUSTY NORTHEAST WINDS CONTINUED ACROSS THE REGION THROUGH THE AFTERNOON OF THE 1ST. PEAK WIND GUSTS ON THE 1ST INCLUDED 56 MPH AT SANDBERG...49 MPH AT CAMP NINE...48 MPH AT WHITAKER PEAK...47 MPH AT WARM SPRINGS AND MONTECITO...46 MPH AT MALIBU HILLS AND CHILAO...39 MPH AT NEWHALL PASS...36 MPH AT LEO CARRILLO BEACH AND 35 MPH AT CAMARILLO AIRPORT. WHERE THE WINDS DROPPED OFF...CLEAR AND VERY DRY CONDITIONS ALLOWED FOR STRONG RADIATIONAL COOLING OF THE ALREADY CHILLY AIRMASS WHICH HAD IT ORIGINS OVER THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS. THIS ALLOWED FOR A COUPLE OF RECORD LOW TEMPERATURES...INCLUDING LOWS OF 34 DEGREES AT PASO ROBLES AIRPORT AND 32 DEGREES AT LANCASTER AIRPORT...BOTH OF WHICH TIED RECORDS FOR THE DATE. EVEN MORE IMPRESSIVE IS THAT THE LOW TEMPERATURE OF 32 DEGREES AT LANCASTER AIRPORT ALSO TIED A RECORD LOW FOR THE ENTIRE MONTH OF MAY...WHICH WAS ORIGINALLY SET ON MAY 1ST 1967. OFFSHORE FLOW DESCENDING FROM THE MOUNTAINS INTO THE COASTAL PLAIN WARMED SIGNIFICANTLY...AND IT PRODUCED ONE RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURE ON THE 1ST. AT CAMARILLO AIRPORT...THE HIGH TEMPERATURE OF 83 DEGREES BROKE THE DAILY RECORD...WHICH HAD BEEN 80 DEGREES. UPPER LEVEL HIGH PRESSURE BROUGHT WARM WEATHER TO MOST OF THE REGION FROM THE 2ND THROUGH THE 5TH. THE WARMEST DAY OF THE ENTIRE MONTH OCCURRED ON EITHER THE 3RD OR 4TH IN MOST LOCATIONS. ON THE 4TH... THE HIGH TEMPERATURE OF 90 DEGREES AT UCLA SET A NEW RECORD FOR THE DATE...AS DID THE HIGH OF 91 DEGREES AT SAN LUIS OBISPO CAL POLY. AT SANTA MARIA AIRPORT...THE HIGH OF 90 DEGREES TIED A DAILY RECORD. WEATHER MORE TYPICAL OF EARLY MAY RETURNED TO THE REGION ON THE 6TH...THEN A TROUGH OF LOW PRESSURE MOVING INTO THE WEST COAST BROUGHT COOLER THAN NORMAL WEATHER FROM THE 7TH THROUGH THE 9TH. INCREASINGLY STRONG ONSHORE PRESSURE GRADIENTS BROUGHT GUSTY WINDS TO THE CENTRAL COAST...THE MOUNTAINS OF LOS ANGELES AND VENTURA COUNTIES AND THE ANTELOPE VALLEY...AND THE SANTA YNEZ RANGE AND ADJACENT SOUTH COAST OF SANTA BARBARA COUNTY ON THE 8TH AND 9TH. PEAK WIND GUSTS INCLUDED 51 MPH AT LAKE PALMDALE...46 MPH AT CAMP NINE...45 MPH AT MONTECITO...44 MPH AT LANCASTER AIRPORT...40 MPH AT POPPY PARK...AND 36 MPH AT SANTA BARBARA AIRPORT. AN UPPER LEVEL IMPULSE DROPPED SOUTHWARD INTO CALIFORNIA LATE ON THE 9TH...BRINGING A FEW SHOWERS TO THE REGION. WHERE MEASURABLE RAINFALL OCCURRED...TOTALS WERE LESS THAN ONE TENTH OF AN INCH. THE WEATHER TURNED MORE SEASONABLE AGAIN FROM THE 11TH THROUGH THE 13TH. THEN...A LARGE UPPER LOW IN THE EASTERN PACIFIC MOVED INTO A POSITION WELL OFF THE COAST OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA ON THE 14TH. A COLD FRONT ASSOCIATED WITH THIS SYSTEM PUSHED THROUGH THE REGION ON THE 15TH. STRONG ONSHORE FLOW AHEAD OF THE FRONT PRODUCED GUSTY WINDS ACROSS THE ANTELOPE VALLEY. PEAK WIND GUSTS INCLUDED 55 MPH AT LAKE PALMDALE...48 MPH AT POPPY PARK AND 39 MPH AT LANCASTER AIRPORT. THE FRONT ITSELF BROUGHT SOME LATE SEASON LIGHT RAIN TO THE ENTIRE FORECAST AREA ON THE 15TH. SOME RAINFALL TOTALS INCLUDED 0.75 INCHES AT ROCKY BUTTE...0.63 INCHES AT CAMBRIA...0.52 INCHES AT LAS TABLAS...0.37 INCHES AT POINT PIEDRAS BLANCAS...0.36 INCHES AT BLACK MOUNTAIN AND CRYSTAL LAKE...0.35 INCHES AT UPPER TORO CREEK...0.34 INCHES AT PASO ROBLES AIRPORT...0.29 INCHES AT GIBRALTAR DAM...0.24 INCHES AT WEST FORK HELIPORT...OPIDS CAMP AND FIGUEROA MOUNTAIN... 0.23 INCHES AT SAN GABRIEL DAM...0.21 INCHES AT MORRO BAY AND SAN LUIS OBISPO AIRPORT...0.20 INCHES AT MONTECITO...0.15 INCHES AT LOS PRIETOS...0.14 INCHES AT SANTA MONICA AIRPORT...0.13 INCHES AT UCLA AND PASADENA...0.11 INCHES AT SANTA BARBARA AIRPORT...LA VERNE AND AVALON...0.08 INCHES AT LOS ANGELES AIRPORT...0.07 INCHES AT DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES...LONG BEACH AIRPORT AND IN AGOURA HILLS...0.06 INCHES AT BURBANK AIRPORT AND AT THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN OXNARD...AND 0.05 INCHES AT LANCASTER AIRPORT. AT LONG BEACH AIRPORT...THE RAINFALL OF 0.07 INCHES ON THE 15TH BROKE A RECORD FOR THE DATE. BEHIND THE FRONTAL SYSTEM...WEAK HIGH PRESSURE BUILT INTO THE REGION LATE ON THE 15TH INTO THE FIRST HALF OF 16TH. THE COOL AIR MASS IN THE WAKE OF THE FRONT ALLOWED FOR SOME RECORD DAILY LOW TEMPERATURES ON THE 16TH. LOW TEMPERATURES OF 32 DEGREES AT SANDBERG...42 DEGREES AT CAMARILLO AIRPORT AND 49 DEGREES AT LONG BEACH AIRPORT ALL SET NEW RECORDS FOR THE DATE...WHILE THE LOW OF 42 DEGREES AT LANCASTER AIRPORT TIED A DAILY RECORD. ANOTHER COLD FRONT ASSOCIATED WITH AN UNSEASONABLY STRONG LATE SEASON SYSTEM BROUGHT MORE RAIN TO THE REGION LATE ON THE 16TH INTO THE 17TH. RAIN BEGAN ON THE CENTRAL COAST DURING THE AFTERNOON HOURS ON THE 16TH...THEN CONTINUED THROUGH THE EARLY MORNING OF THE 17TH. RAIN SPREAD INTO VENTURA COUNTY LATE IN THE EVENING ON THE 16TH AND INTO LOS ANGELES COUNTY DURING THE EARLY MORNING HOURS OF THE 17TH. RAIN TURNED TO SHOWERS IN MOST AREAS BY THE AFTERNOON. GUSTY SOUTH TO SOUTHWEST WINDS AFFECTED THE MOUNTAINS AND THE ANTELOPE VALLEY ON THE 17H. PEAK WIND GUSTS INCLUDED 64 MPH AT LAKE PALMDALE...52 MPH AT CAMP NINE...41 MPH AT SANDBERG...40 MPH AT CHILAO...39 MPH AT LANCASTER AIRPORT AND 37 MPH AT PALMDALE AIRPORT. ON THE 16TH...SANTA BARBARA AIRPORT RECEIVED 0.19 INCHES OF RAIN...WHICH SET A RECORD FOR THE DATE. NUMEROUS DAILY RAINFALL RECORDS WERE SET ON THE 17TH...INCLUDING 0.26 INCHES AT LONG BEACH AIRPORT AND CAMARILLO AIRPORT.....0.25 INCHES AT LOS ANGELES AIRPORT...0.18 INCHES AT DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES...0.16 INCHES AT BURBANK AIRPORT AND 0.15 INCHES AT SANTA BARBARA AIRPORT. A SECOND IMPULSE ASSOCIATED WITH THE STRONG UPPER LEVEL SYSTEM BROUGHT ANOTHER ROUND OF SHOWERS TO THE REGION LATE ON THE 17TH THROUGH THE MORNING HOURS OF THE 18TH. SOME RAINFALL TOTALS FROM THE 16TH THROUGH THE 18TH INCLUDED 2.32 INCHES AT ROCKY BUTTE...1.97 INCHES AT AVALON...1.65 INCHES AT NORDHOFF RIDGE...1.24 INCHES AT SAN LUIS OBISPO AIRPORT...1.10 INCHES AT UPPER TORO CREEK... 0.95 INCHES AT CAMBRIA...0.94 INCHES AT OPIDS CAMP AND STEWART CANYON...0.90 INCHES AT OLD MAN MOUNTAIN...0.89 INCHES AT LAKE CASITAS...0.88 INCHES AT SAN MARCOS PASS....0.86 INCHES AT LAS TABLAS...0.85 INCHES AT MONTECITO...0.83 INCHES AT LAKE LOPEZ AND WEST BIG PINE...0.80 INCHES AT SAN LUIS OBISPO CAL POLY...0.74 INCHES AT LONG BEACH AIRPORT...0.71 INCHES AT PIRU...REFUGIO PASS AND GIBRALTAR DAM...0.69 INCHES AT FILLMORE...0.67 INCHES AT MOORPARK...ROSE VALLEY AND FIGUEROA MOUNTAIN...0.65 INCHES AT NORTHRIDGE AND CAMP NINE...0.60 INCHES AT LOS ANGELES AIRPORT...0.59 INCHES AT CRYSTAL LAKE...0.55 INCHES AT PACOIMA DAM...0.52 INCHES AT SANTA MONICA AIRPORT...0.49 INCHES AT UCLA...0.48 INCHES AT REDONDO BEACH...GETTY CENTER AND MONTE NIDO...0.44 INCHES AT DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES...0.41 INCHES AT HAWTHORNE...WOODLAND HILLS AND THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN OXNARD...0.40 INCHES IN AGOURA HILLS...BEVERLY HILLS AND NEWHALL...0.38 INCHES AT SANTA BARBARA AIRPORT AND 0.28 INCHES AT BURBANK AIRPORT...AND JUST A TRACE AT LANCASTER AND PALMDALE AIRPORTS. ON THE 18TH...LONG BEACH AIRPORT RECEIVED 0.28 INCHES OF RAINFALL...SETTING A RECORD FOR THE DATE...WHILE THE 0.19 INCHES RECEIVED AT LOS ANGELES AIRPORT AND THE TRACE OF RAIN AT LANCASTER AIRPORT TIED DAILY RECORDS. BEHIND THIS SECOND IMPULSE...GUSTY SOUTHWEST TO WEST WINDS AFFECTED MUCH OF THE REGION ON THE 18TH. PEAK WIND GUSTS INCLUDED 58 MPH AT WHITAKER PEAK...53 MPH AT WARM SPRINGS...50 MPH AT LANCASTER AIRPORT...48 MPH AT POPPY PARK...45 MPH AT CAMP NINE AND SANDBERG...37 MPH AT OXNARD AIRPORT...36 MPH AT LOS ANGELES AIRPORT AND CAMARILLO AIRPORT...AND 35 MPH AT SANTA MARIA AIRPORT. GENERALLY COOL AND DRY WEATHER FOLLOWED ON THE 19TH...THEN TEMPERATURES RETURNED TO ABOUT NORMAL ON THE 20TH AND 21ST. AN UPPER LEVEL TROUGH BROUGHT A DEEP MARINE LAYER AND CONSIDERABLE COOLING TO THE REGION ON THE 22ND...WITH GENERALLY BELOW NORMAL TEMPERATURES CONTINUING FOR THE REMAINDER OF THE MONTH. ON THE 23RD...GUSTY WINDS AFFECTED THE CENTRAL COAST...THE MOUNTAINS AND THE ANTELOPE VALLEY. PEAK WIND GUSTS INCLUDED 54 MPH AT LAKE PALMDALE...41 MPH AT POPPY PARK...39 MPH AT LOMPOC AIRPORT AND SADDLEBACK BUTTE...38 MPH AT LANCASTER AIRPORT AND AT SANDBERG... AND 37 MPH AT SANTA MARIA AIRPORT. A STRONG TROUGH MOVED ACROSS CALIFORNIA ON THE 26TH...THEN INTO GREAT BASIN ON THE 27TH...AND ANOTHER UPPER LOW DROPPED THROUGH NORTHERN CALIFORNIA ON THE 28TH AND INTO THE GREAT BASIN ON THE 29TH. THIS BROUGHT PERIODS OF STRONG AND GUSTY WINDS TO MUCH OF THE REGION FROM THE 26TH THROUGH THE 29TH...ALONG WITH WELL BELOW NORMAL TEMPERATURES. ON THE 29TH...A WEAKENING FRONTAL SYSTEM BROUGHT SOME LIGHT AMOUNTS OF MEASURABLE RAIN TO PORTIONS OF THE FORECAST AREA. RAINFALL TOTALS WERE ONE TENTH OF AN INCH OR LESS...WITH LOCALLY HIGHER TOTALS INCLUDING 0.32 INCHES AT BLACK MOUNTAIN...0.20 INCHES AT LOMPOC AIRPORT...AND 0.11 INCHES AT VANDENBERG AFB. NEW DAILY RAINFALL RECORDS FOR THE 29TH INCLUDED 0.04 INCHES AT LONG BEACH AIRPORT...0.02 INCHES AT SANDBERG...AND 0.01 INCHES AT PASO ROBLES AND SANTA MARIA AIRPORTS. THE TRACE OF RAIN RECORDED AT LANCASTER AIRPORT TIED A DAILY RECORD. IT WAS VERY CHILLY ON THE 29TH. HIGH TEMPERATURES OF 60 DEGREES AT LANCASTER AND PALMDALE AIRPORTS BOTH SET NEW DAILY RECORDS FOR LOWEST MAXIMUM TEMPERATURES. SOME PEAK WIND GUSTS FROM THE 27TH THROUGH THE 29TH INCLUDED 64 MPH AT CAMP NINE...57 MPH IN THE CITY OF LANCASTER...56 MPH AT SAUGUS...55 MPH AT LAKE PALMDALE...51 MPH AT PORT HUENEME AND WHITAKER PEAK...49 MPH AT POPPY PARK...48 MPH AT MALIBU HILLS...47 MPH AT LANCASTER AIRPORT...45 MPH AT POINT MUGU...43 MPH AT PALMDALE AIRPORT...SADDLEBACK BUTTE AND SANDBERG...41 MPH AT SANTA MARIA AIRPORT AND MONTECITO HILLS...40 MPH AT BURBANK AIRPORT AND CAMARILLO AIRPORT..39 MPH AT OXNARD AIRPORT...SANTA BARBARA AIRPORT AND VANDENBERG AFB...38 MPH AT LOMPOC AIRPORT...37 MPH AT VAN NUYS AIRPORT AND 36 MPH AT SAN LUIS OBISPO AIRPORT. SUSTAINED WINDS OF 42 MPH WERE RECORDED AT LAS FLORES CANYON. IN THE COLD AIRMASS BEHIND THE FRONT...SOME NEW DAILY RECORD LOWS WERE SET ON THE 30TH AND 31ST. NEW RECORD LOWS ON THE 30TH INCLUDED 44 DEGREES AT CAMARILLO AIRPORT AND 38 DEGREES AT PASO ROBLES AIRPORT. ON THE 31ST...NEW RECORD LOWS INCLUDED 35 DEGREES AT PASO ROBLES AIRPORT AND 41 DEGREES AT SAN LUIS OBISPO CAL POLY...WHILE THE LOW OF 41 DEGREES AT PALMDALE AIRPORT TIED A DAILY RECORD. THE LOW OF 35 DEGREES AT PASO ROBLES AIRPORT WAS THE LOWEST TEMPERATURE EVER RECORDED SO LATE IN THE SEASON. .............CLIMATE DATA FOR MAY 2011.................................. AVG AVG AVG NORM MONTH TOTAL NORM PRECIP HIGH LOW MONTH MONTH XTRMS PRECIP PRECIP % NORM ------------------------------------------------------ L.A. DOWNTOWN 73.6 56.0 64.8 66.2 93/51 0.45 0.31 145% L.A. ARPT 68.7 56.2 62.4 63.1 87/51 0.53 0.24 221% LONG BEACH ARPT 72.8 55.1 64.0 65.9 93/49 0.66 0.23 287% UCLA 70.8 54.6 62.7 62.9 90/47 0.64 0.34 188% BURBANK ARPT 73.8 53.5 63.6 65.9 93/47 0.38 0.37 103% WOODLAND HILLS 75.6 48.3 62.0 65.2 95/41 0.48 0.32 150% LANCASTER ARPT 76.1 47.6 61.8 66.1 93/32 0.05 0.12 42% SANDBERG 62.8 43.7 53.2 57.4 82/32 0.26 0.28 93% CAMARILLO ARPT 70.1 48.4 59.2 60.5 86/42 0.45 0.21 214% SANTA BARBARA ARPT 69.2 49.3 59.2 60.9 84/46 0.55 0.23 239% SANTA MARIA ARPT 68.8 45.0 56.9 57.8 90/38 0.38 0.32 119% PASO ROBLES ARPT 76.8 43.5 60.2 63.3 94/34 0.79 0.23 343% $$ BRUNO  436 NOUS43 KBIS 131754 PNSBIS NDZ034-042-140600- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 1254 PM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 /1154 AM MDT MON JUN 13 2011/ ...PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT... NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK STAFF ARE CONDUCTING A STORM DAMAGE SURVEY IN GRANT AND MORTON COUNTIES THIS AFTERNOON. STRUCTURAL DAMAGE TO A HOME AND OUTBUILDINGS MAY HAVE BEEN CAUSED BY A TORNADO. RESULTS WILL BE COMPILED AND PUBLISHED LATER THIS AFTERNOON. $$ SCHECK  730 NOUS44 KMRX 131756 PNSMRX NCZ060-061-TNZ012>018-035>047-067>074-081>087-098>102-VAZ001-002-005- 006-008-140000- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE MORRISTOWN TN 155 PM EDT MON JUN 13 2011 THE RAINFALL AMOUNTS LISTED BELOW ARE LISTED BY THE COUNTY INTO WHICH THE RAIN FALLS, AND THEN THE RESERVOIR/BASIN INTO WHICH THE WATER WILL FLOW AFTER IT HITS THE GROUND. FOR EXAMPLE, RAIN FALLING AT MCGHEE-TYSON AIRPORT WILL FLOW INTO FT. LOUDON-TELLICO LAKE. THESE FIGURES COME FROM A COMBINATION OF TVA, USGS, COE, NWS, AND VARIOUS COUNTY-OWNED RAIN GAUGES. OUR THANKS TO THESE COOPERATORS. TOTALS ARE FOR THE 24 HOURS ENDING AT 8 AM EDT (7 AM CDT) OR 7 AM EST (6 AM CST). T = TRACE COUNTY, STATE 24 HOUR RESERVOIR PRECIPITATION LOCATION (INCHES) ________________________________________________________________ CARTER COUNTY, TN BOONE LAKE WATAUGA DAM (TVA - WTGT1) 0.23 CLAIBORNE COUNTY, TN NORRIS LAKE POWELL RIVER NR ARTHUR (TVA - ARTT1) 0.01 COCKE COUNTY, TN DOUGLAS LAKE COSBY (TVA - CBYT1) 0.01 FRENCH BROAD RIVER NR NEWPORT (TVA - NWPT1) 0.60 HAWKINS COUNTY, TN CHEROKEE LAKE CHURCH HILL (TVA - CHHT1) 0.07 ROGERSVILLE-JOHN SEVIER PLANT (TVA - JSST1) 0.06 JOHNSON COUNTY, TN WATAUGA LAKE PANDORA (TVA - PANT1) 0.36 SEVIER COUNTY, TN DOUGLAS LAKE MT. LECONTE (NWS COOP - MTLT1) 0.02 FT. LOUDON/TELLICO LAKE DOUGLAS DAM (TVA - DUGT1) 0.23 SULLIVAN COUNTY, TN BOONE LAKE TRI-CITIES AIRPORT (ASOS - TRI) 0.24 WASHINGTON COUNTY, TN CHEROKEE LAKE BOONE DAM (TVA - BOOT1) 0.61 WASHINGTON COUNTY, VA SOUTH HOLSTON LAKE ABINGDON (TVA - ABDV2) 0.25 CHEROKEE COUNTY, NC APALACHIA LAKE HIWASSEE DAM (TVA - HIWN7) 0.26 CLAY COUNTY, NC HIWASSEE LAKE CHATUGE DAM (TVA - CHAN7) 0.35 END $$  223 NOAK49 PAFG 131823 PNSAFG AKZ206-218-140630- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FAIRBANKS AK 1023 AM AKDT MON JUN 13 2011 ....SNOW OVER THE BROOKS RANGE SNOW OVERNIGHT AND MONDAY HAS ACCUMULATED IN THE BROOKS RANGE. A SMALL ACCUMULATION ON VEGETATION HAS OCCURRED AT THE CHANDALAR DOT CAMP AT DALTON HIGHWAY MILE 239. AN AUTOMATED WEATHER STATION AT THE TOP OF ATIGUN PASS ON THE DALTON HIGHWAY REPORTED ABOUT THREE INCHES OF NEW SNOW AS OF 9AM MONDAY. SMALL ACCUMULATIONS HAVE ALSO BEEN NOTED AT ANAKTUVUK PASS...TOOLIK LAKE AND THE SAG RIVER DOT CAMP AT DALTON HIGHWAY MILE 306. LIGHT SNOWFALL IN THE BROOKS RANGE IN JUNE IS NOT UNCOMMON AND WILL MELT AT ROAD AND COMMUNITY ELEVATIONS THIS AFTERNOON AND TONIGHT. $$ RT JUN 11  868 NOUS43 KSGF 131835 PNSSGF KSZ073-097-101-MOZ055>058-066>071-077>083-088>098-101>106-140045- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SPRINGFIELD MO 135 PM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...NOAA WEATHER RADIO TRANSMITTER IN DIXON DOWN... NOAA WEATHER RADIO STATION WNG-648 IN DIXON IS DOWN. NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE TECHNICIANS ARE CURRENTLY TROUBLESHOOTING THE PROBLEM. THE FOLLOWING IS A LIST OF ALTERNATIVE TRANSMITTERS FOR COUNTIES NORMALLY COVERED BY THE DIXON TRANSMITTER. COUNTY........ALTERNATIVE TRANSMITTERS(FREQUENCY) DENT..........WWF-76 IN SUMMERSVILLE (162.475) LACLEDE.......WXJ-90 IN OSAGE BEACH (162.550) WXL-40 IN FORDLAND (162.400) MARIES........WXJ-90 IN OSAGE BEACH (162.550) MILLER........WXJ-90 IN OSAGE BEACH (162.550) PHELPS........WXJ-90 IN OSAGE BEACH (162.550) WWF-75 BOURBON MO(162.525) FROM NWS ST. LOUIS PULASKI.......WXJ-90 IN OSAGE BEACH (162.550) TEXAS.........WWF-76 IN SUMMERSVILLE (162.475) WE APOLOGIZE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE THIS MAY CAUSE. $$ KURTZ  557 NOUS42 KFFC 131858 PNSFFC GAZ006-008-009-015-016-140700- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE PEACHTREE CITY GA 258 PM EDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT... ...NOAA WEATHER RADIO TRANSMITTER AT BRASSTOWN BALD...KXI 22...BROADCASTING ON 162.500 MEGAHERTZ IS BACK ON THE AIR. FOR MORE WEATHER INFORMATION...YOU CAN VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT WWW.WEATHER.GOV/ATLANTA. $$  598 NOUS42 KFFC 131912 PNSFFC GAZ078-079-089>091-102-103-140715- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE PEACHTREE CITY GA 312 PM EDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT... ...NOAA WEATHER RADIO TRANSMITTER AT COLUMBUS BACK ON THE AIR... THE NOAA WEATHER RADIO TRANSMITTER...WXM 32 AT COLUMBUS IS BACK ON THE AIR. FOR MORE WEATHER INFORMATION PLEASE VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT WWW.WEATHER.GOV/ATLANTA. $$  766 NOUS41 KALY 131932 PNSALY CTZ001-013-MAZ001-025-NYZ032-033-038>043-047>054-058>061-063>066-082> 084-VTZ013>015-132300- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ALBANY NY 330 PM EDT MON JUN 13 2011 ... PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT... ...NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ALBANY NEW YORK HAS INSTALLED A NEW VERSION OF SOFTWARE FOR THE RADIOSONDE REPLACEMENT SYSTEM WORKSTATION SUBSYSTEM... ON JUNE 13 2011...THE ALBANY NY WFO ALY INSTALLED NEW SOFTWARE...VERSION 2.1 FOR THE RADIOSONDE REPLACEMENT SYSTEM WORKSTATION SUBSYSTEM. THE FIRST FLIGHT OF RECORD OCCURRED AT 3 PM / 1900 UTC ON JUNE 13 2011. VERSION 2.1 SOFTWARE IS A MAINTENANCE REVISION TO THE 1.2 SOFTWARE VERSION WHICH WAS INSTALLED IN ALBANY IN MAY OF 2010. VERSION 2.1 SOFTWARE CORRECTS ISSUES IDENTIFIED WITH SOFTWARE 1.2. IT ALSO PROVIDES A NUMBER OF ENHANCEMENTS TO AID THE OBSERVERS IN TAKING AN UPPER AIR SOUNDING. THE RADIOSONDE REPLACEMENT SYSTEM IS USED TO COLLECT...PROCESS...AND DISSEMINATE UPPER AIR DATA USING MODERN GROUND TRACKING EQUIPMENT AND GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM (GPS) RADIOSONDES. $$ SCROM  303 NOUS44 KAMA 131939 PNSAMA OKZ001>003-TXZ001>020-130500- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE AMARILLO TX 238 PM CDT SUN JUN 12 2011 ...RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURE SET AT RICK HUSBAND AMARILLO INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT... A RECORD HIGH OF 104 DEGREES WAS SET IN AMARILLO TODAY AT 232 PM. THIS BROKE THE PREVIOUS RECORD OF 103 DEGREES SET IN 1924 AND 1953. $$ TAS  611 NOUS41 KRNK 131941 PNSRNK NCZ001>006-018>020-VAZ007-009>020-022>024-032>035-043>047-058-059- WVZ042>045-140700- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BLACKSBURG VA 340 PM EDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...PRECIPITATION TOTALS... THE FOLLOWING IS A LIST OF UNOFFICIAL PRECIPITATION TOTALS GREATER THAN 0.25 INCHES FOR A 24 HOUR PERIOD ENDING AT 8 AM MONDAY. THESE REPORTS ARE FROM A COMBINATION OF SOURCES INCLUDING COOP AND COCORAHS OBSERVERS...IFLOWS GAGES...AND ASOS AND HAVE NOT BEEN QUALITY CONTROLLED. NORTH CAROLINA ...ASHE COUNTY... 0.45 JEFFERSON 2E COOP 0.43 NF NEW R. / CLIFTON IFLOWS 0.33 NF NEW/ASHLAND IFLOWS ...SURRY COUNTY... 1.79 RAVEN KNOB RAWS ...WATAUGA COUNTY... 2.40 BLOWING ROCK 2.2. NE COCORAHS 2.25 BLOWING ROCK 2.8 ENE COCORAHS 1.46 SANDY FLATS IFLOWS 0.95 BEECH MOUNTAIN 1.2 SE COCORAHS 0.74 TRIPLETT RG DCP 0.43 PARKWAY SCHOOL IFLOWS 0.36 SHAWNEEHAW FD IFLOWS 0.33 FOSCOE 1.2 WSW COCORAHS 0.27 BOONE 1 SE COOP ...WILKES COUNTY... 1.20 MILLERS CREEK 8.6 N COCORAHS 1.12 MILLERS CREEK 1.9 NNW COCORAHS 1.06 RENDEZVOUS MTN RAWS SITE 0.54 ELK CREEK DCP 0.53 WILBAR RG DCP 0.48 ROARING RIVER DCP 0.25 NORTH WILKESBORO COOP ...YADKIN COUNTY... 0.33 YADKINVILLE COOP VIRGINIA ...AMHERST COUNTY... 0.40 PEDLAR DAM COOP ...APPOMATTOX COUNTY... 1.10 APPOMATTOX COOP ...BEDFORD COUNTY... 1.87 MONETA 3.9 SW COCORAHS 1.72 MONETA 3.6 SW COCORAHS 1.17 MONETA 3.7 SW COCORAHS 0.81 MONETA 4.5 SSW COCORAHS 0.64 MONETA 4.8 S COCORAHS 0.52 HUDDLESTON COOP 0.36 BEDFORD COOP 0.31 BEDFORD 1.1 N COCORAHS ...BOTETOURT COUNTY... 0.40 APPLE ORCHARD IFLOWS ...BUCKINGHAM COUNTY... 1.51 BUCKINGHAM COOP ...CITY OF ROANOKE... 0.40 ROANOKE ...CITY OF LYNCHBURG... 1.38 LYNCHBURG 2.5 WSW COCORAHS ...CAMPBELL COUNTY... 1.43 BROOKNEAL COOP 1.20 LYNCHBURG AIRPORT (ASOS) 1.15 LYNCHBURG COOP 1.01 GLADYS 0.6 S COCORAHS 0.98 LYNCHBURG 6.4 SSW COCORAHS 0.97 GLADYS 3.7 N COCORAHS 0.87 LYNCHBURG 6.7 ESE COCORAHS ...CARROLL COUNTY... 0.56 FANCY GAP IFLOWS ...CHARLOTTE COUNTY... 1.50 KEYSVILLE COOP 0.66 CHARLOTTE COURT HOUSE 5.9 NNW COCORAHS 0.30 SAXE 4.3 SE COCORAHS ...FLUVANNA COUNTY... 0.79 BREMO BLUFF ...FRANKLIN COUNTY... 2.07 HARDY 7.1 SE COCORAHS 1.41 HARDY 7.8 SE COCORAHS 1.35 BOONES MILL 12.6 E COCORAHS 0.41 MAGGODEE CK IFLOWS 0.37 UNION HALL 1.9 NW COCORAHS 0.36 SIMMONDS GAP IFLOWS 0.31 BOONES MILL 5.5 E COCORAHS ...GILES COUNTY... 0.63 SPRUCE RUN IFLOWS ...HALIFAX COUNTY... 0.70 RANDOLPH ...HENRY COUNTY... 0.48 BLACKBERRY CREEK IFLOWS 0.40 MARROWBONE RES. IFLOWS 0.37 BLUE RIDGE AIRPORT 0.28 RANGELEY BRANCH IFLOWS ...MONTGOMERY COUNTY... 0.46 BLACKSBURG 0.4 N COCORAHS 0.40 BRUSH MTN IFLOWS 0.36 BLACKSBURG IFLOWS 0.35 BLACKSBURG 1.7 ESE COCORAHS 0.34 BLACKSBURG NWS 0.27 BLACKSBURG 1.6 W COCORAHS ...NELSON COUNTY... 1.90 MONTEBELLO FISH NURSERY 0.51 BENT CREEK ...PATRICK COUNTY... 1.34 TROT VALLEY IFLOWS 1.30 CIRCLE M IFLOWS 0.80 CENTRAL ACADEMY IFLOWS 0.72 BUSTED ROCK #1 IFLOWS 0.48 RAVEN ROCK CHURCH IFLOWS 0.44 CRITZ IFLOWS 0.43 WILLOW HILL CHRCH IFLOWS 0.32 SAMUEL GROVE CHURCH IFLOWS 0.32 STUART 6.7 SSE COCORAHS ...ROANOKE COUNTY... 0.32 MILL MOUNTAIN IFLOWS ...ROCKBRIDGE COUNTY... 0.79 IRISH GAP IFLOWS 0.71 GLASGOW IFLOWS SG/RG 0.45 GLASGOW COOP 0.32 ROCKBRIDGE BATHS IFLW/USGS 0.32 VESUVIUS IFLOWS 0.32 BUENA VISTA COOP 0.25 BUENA VISTA 6.3 NNE COCORAHS ...SMYTH COUNTY... 1.07 EMPIRE AP IFLOWS 0.91 NEBO IFLOWS 0.67 SALTVILLE COOP 0.66 SALTVILLE PRECIP (TVA) 0.53 MARION 4.4 WSW COCORAHS 0.31 MT EMPIRE AIRPORT 0.25 MARION 2.4 ENE COCORAHS ...TAZEWELL COUNTY... 1.15 GRATTON IFLOWS 0.94 JEWELL RIDGE IFLOWS 0.71 BURKES GARDEN COOP 0.68 WHITAKER RIDGE IFLOWS 0.52 STONY RIDGE IFLOWS 0.36 SPRINGVILLE IFLOWS 0.28 RICHLANDS COOP ...WASHINGTON COUNTY... 0.25 VA HIGHLANDS AIRPORT ...WYTHE COUNTY... 0.36 STONY FORK USFS RAWS 0.36 CRAWFISH VALLEY IFLOWS 0.28 2WAY WYTHEVILLE IFLOWS WEST VIRGINA ...GREENBRIER COUNTY... 0.35 WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS COOP ...MERCER COUNTY... 0.83 BRAMWELL IFLOWS 0.72 PRINCETON COOP 0.63 BLUEFIELD IFLOWS 0.55 GLENWOOD IFLOWS SG/RG 0.44 MATAOKA IFLOWS 0.36 BLUEFIELD COOP 0.35 BLUEFIELD FAA AIRPORT 0.28 EGERIA IFLOWS 0.27 BLUEFIELD 1.0 SW COCORAHS ...MONROE COUNTY... 0.59 UNION COOP ...SUMMERS COUNTY... 0.95 KEENEY KNOB IFLOWS 0.30 BLUESTONE LAKE COOP $$  111 NOUS43 KOAX 132020 PNSOAX SERVICE CHANGE NOTICE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE OMAHA/VALLEY NE 321 PM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...CHANGE IN MAJOR FLOOD STAGE AT NEBRASKA CITY, NEBRASKA... TO: FAMILY OF SERVICES /FOS/ SUBSCRIBERS...NOAA WEATHER WIRE SERVICE /NWWS/ SUBSCRIBERS...EMERGENCY MANAGERS WEATHER INFORMATION NETWORK /EMWIN/ SUBSCRIBERS...NOAA PORT SUBSCRIBERS...OTHER NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE /NWS/ CUSTOMERS AND PARTNERS...AND NWS EMPLOYEES FROM: JAMES MEYER METEOROLOGIST IN CHARGE WFO OMAHA/VALLEY, VALLEY NEBRASKA SUBJECT: CHANGE IN MAJOR FLOOD STAGE AT NEBRASKA CITY, NEBRASKA THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE USES THREE CATEGORIES TO DEFINE FLOODING. THESE CATEGORIES ARE MINOR, MODERATE AND MAJOR. MINOR FLOODING IS DEFINED AS FLOODING THAT POSES SOME PUBLIC THREAT WITH MINIMAL PROPERTY DAMAGE. MODERATE FLOODING IS DEFINED AS THE FLOODING OF SOME STRUCTURES AND ROADS, INCLUDING SOME EVACUATIONS. MAJOR FLOODING IS DEFINED AS EXTENSIVE INUNDATION OF STRUCTURES AND ROADS WITH SIGNIFICANT EVACUATIONS OF PEOPLE. TO BETTER REFLECT THE CURRENT FLOODING SITUATION, THE MAJOR FLOOD STAGE WILL CHANGE AT THE NEBRASKA CITY RIVER GAUGE TO 27 FEET. THERE IS NO CHANGE TO THE OTHER FLOOD STAGES AT THIS TIME. THIS CHANGE IN MAJOR FLOOD STAGE AT NEBRASKA CITY BETTER REFLECTS WHEN MAJOR FLOODING BEGINS. THIS CHANGE IS EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY. OLD MAJOR NEW MAJOR FLOOD STAGE FLOOD STAGE ----------- ------------ NEB. CITY 29.6 27.0 MINOR FLOOD STAGE AT NEBRASKA CITY IS 18 FEET. MODERATE FLOOD STAGE AT NEBRASKA CITY IS 23 FEET. FOR THE LATEST RIVER FORECASTS, PLEASE VISIT: WWW.WATER.WEATHER.GOV/AHPS2/INDEX.PHP?WFO=OAX (ALL LOWER CASE) FOR THE LONG RANGE RIVER FORECAST GO TO: WWW.NWO.USACE.ARMY.MIL/HTML/OP-E/FLOOD.HTML (ALL LOWER CASE) THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE WELCOMES FEEDBACK. IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS OR COMMENTS ON THE INFORMATION INCLUDED IN THIS DOCUMENT...PLEASE CONTACT: DAVID PEARSON SENIOR SERVICE HYDROLOGIST NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST OFFICE 6707 NORTH 288TH STREET VALLEY, NE 68064-9443 PHONE: 402-359-5166 X493 EMAIL: DAVID.PEARSON@NOAA.GOV (ALL LOWER CASE) $$ PEARSON  751 NOUS44 KAMA 132020 PNSAMA OKZ001>003-TXZ001>020-130500- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE AMARILLO TX 320 PM CDT SUN JUN 12 2011 ...RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURES CONTINUE AT RICK HUSBAND AMARILLO INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT... A RECORD HIGH OF 105 DEGREES WAS REACHED IN AMARILLO TODAY AT 254 PM. THIS BROKE THE PREVIOUS RECORD OF 103 DEGREES SET IN 1924 AND 1953. $$ TAS  942 NOUS43 KBIS 132022 PNSBIS NDZ001>005-009>013-017>023-025-031>037-040>048-050-051-150230- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 321 PM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 /221 PM MDT MON JUN 13 2011/ ...PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT... THE FOLLOWING ARE 24 HOUR RAINFALL AMOUNTS OVER ONE TENTH OF AN INCH THROUGH MONDAY MORNING FROM NWS COOPERATIVE OBSERVERS AND NORTH DAKOTA ATMOSPHERIC RESOURCE BOARD OBSERVERS. LOCATION PRECIP (INCHES) CENTER 3.80 BOWMAN 2.46 HEART BUTTE DAM 2.00 NEW SALEM 1.84 STANTON 1.83 WILTON 1.55 ZAP 11N 1.55 BUCYRUS 8N 1.41 BOWBELLS 1.10 UNDERWOOD 1.07 MINOT EXP. ST 0.99 VELVA 0.98 SOUTH HEART 0.96 BISMARCK 0.94 BEULAH 0.86 LAKE METIGOSHE 0.86 WISHEK 0.84 WISHEK 8W 0.82 BISMARCK 5NW 0.80 PLAZA 0.80 MINOT NORTH HILL 0.78 ROSEGLEN 0.76 GARRISON 0.73 BISMARCK 8S 0.70 MAXBASS 0.70 TUTTLE 11N 0.70 ASHLEY 0.66 REGAN 0.66 MANDAN 9NW 0.65 CARSON 0.65 FORBES 12W 0.65 COLEHARBOR 0.65 SHERWOOD 3N 0.60 LANSFORD 0.59 BOTTINEAU 0.58 NEWBURG 5W 0.58 GRANO 2NW 0.56 DICKINSON EXP. ST 0.56 WILLOW CITY ND ARB 0.56 MAXBASS 0.56 WILLOW CITY NWS COOP 0.51 SOLEN 15N 0.51 HAGUE 5S 0.49 BALFOUR 0.45 MARSHALL 0.45 KILLDEER 0.43 MONTPELIER 0.41 OVERLY 5E 0.40 DENHOFF 0.38 FLASHER 0.38 DUNN CENTER 0.37 HETTINGER ND ARB 0.37 HAMBURG 3S 0.35 OAKES 0.35 BRADDOCK 5SE 0.35 NEW TOWN 0.34 LINTON 5W 0.33 DONNYBROOK 9W 0.30 LA MOURE 7N 0.27 JAMESTOWN 0.26 SYKESTON 3SE 0.25 CHURCHS FERRY 1 NW 0.25 LUDDEN 10E 0.22 HAMPDEN 4SW 0.16 HAMPDEN 7SE 0.11 $$ LTH  364 NOUS43 KBIS 132034 RRA PNSBIS NDZ035-132345- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 330 PM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...STAGE OF THE MISSOURI RIVER AT BISMARCK... AT 315 PM CDT MONDAY...THE MISSOURI RIVER STAGE WAS 17.88 FEET. $$ WAA  946 NOUS42 KCHS 132042 PNSCHS GAZ087-088-099>101-114>119-137>141-SCZ040-042>045-047>052-140842- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT SPOTTER REPORTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CHARLESTON SC 442 PM EDT MON JUN 13 2011 THE FOLLOWING ARE UNOFFICIAL OBSERVATIONS TAKEN BY AUTOMATED SURFACE OBSERVATION SYSTEMS /ASOS/...FIRE WEATHER REMOTE AUTOMATED WEATHER STATIONS /RAWS/...GEORGIA AUTOMATED MONITORING NETWORK STATIONS /GAEMN/...NOAA/S NATIONAL ESTUARINE RESEARCH RESERVE SYSTEM OBSERVATIONS /NERR/...NATIONAL DATA BUOY CENTER LOCATIONS /NDBC/ AND OTHER QUALITY CONTROLLED SENSORS FROM ACROSS SOUTHEAST SOUTH CAROLINA AND SOUTHEAST GEORGIA. **********************HIGH TEMPERATURE********************** LOCATION MAXIMUM TIME/DATE COMMENTS TEMP OF DEG F MEASUREMENT GEORGIA ...BULLOCH COUNTY... 2 NE STATESBORO 100.0 400 PM 6/13 ...CANDLER COUNTY... 1 ESE METTER 102.0 400 PM 6/13 ...CHATHAM COUNTY... SAVANNAH AIRPORT 101.0 400 PM 6/13 RECORD HIGH FOR DATE. 4 WSW SAVANNAH 101.0 400 PM 6/13 3 SSE GARDEN CITY 100.0 400 PM 6/13 ...EFFINGHAM COUNTY... GUYTON 101.0 400 PM 6/13 ...EVANS COUNTY... 3 NE CLAXTON 100.0 400 PM 6/13 1 W CLAXTON 100.0 400 PM 6/13 ...LONG COUNTY... 3 WNW WALTHOURVILLE 102.0 400 PM 6/13 ...SCREVEN COUNTY... 1 WNW SYLVANIA 100.0 400 PM 6/13 ...TATTNALL COUNTY... 2 NW GLENNVILLE 100.0 400 PM 6/13 SOUTH CAROLINA ...BEAUFORT COUNTY... 4 NW BEAUFORT 101.0 400 PM 6/13 3 ESE BEAUFORT 100.0 400 PM 6/13 ...CHARLESTON COUNTY... CHARLESTON AIRPORT 99.0 400 PM 6/13 RECORD HIGH FOR DATE. ...JASPER COUNTY... HARDEEVILLE 101.0 400 PM 6/13 $$ 33  648 NOUS44 KAMA 132050 PNSAMA OKZ001>003-TXZ001>020-130500- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE AMARILLO TX 320 PM CDT SUN JUN 12 2011 ...HIGH TEMPERATURES CONTINUE TO RISE AT RICK HUSBAND AMARILLO INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT... A RECORD HIGH OF 106 DEGREES WAS REACHED IN AMARILLO TODAY AT 348 PM. THIS BROKE THE PREVIOUS RECORD OF 103 DEGREES SET IN 1924 AND 1953. $$ TAS  825 NOUS41 KCAR 132054 PNSCAR MEZ001>006-010-011-015>017-029>032-140854- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT SPOTTER REPORTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CARIBOU ME 454 PM EDT MON JUN 13 2011 THE FOLLOWING ARE UNOFFICIAL OBSERVATIONS TAKEN DURING THE PAST 24 HOURS FOR THE STORM THAT HAS BEEN AFFECTING OUR REGION. APPRECIATION IS EXTENDED TO HIGHWAY DEPARTMENTS...COOPERATIVE OBSERVERS...CWOP OBSERVERS...SKYWARN SPOTTERS AND MEDIA FOR THESE REPORTS. THIS SUMMARY IS ALSO AVAILABLE ON OUR HOME PAGE AT WEATHER.GOV/CARIBOU ********************STORM TOTAL RAINFALL******************** LOCATION STORM TOTAL TIME/DATE COMMENTS RAINFALL OF /INCHES/ MEASUREMENT MAINE ...AROOSTOOK COUNTY... CLAYTON LAKE 1.37 441 PM 6/13 PRESQUE ISLE 1 ENE 1.36 444 PM 6/13 NINE-MILE BRIDGE 1.20 446 PM 6/13 PORTAGE 2 N 1.12 442 PM 6/13 DICKEY 1.09 441 PM 6/13 HOULTON AIRPORT 1.03 438 PM 6/13 KNOWLES CORNER 1.03 445 PM 6/13 OXBOW 1.02 446 PM 6/13 SAINT FRANCIS 2 NE 0.87 439 PM 6/13 CARIBOU AIRPORT 0.81 437 PM 6/13 EAGLE LAKE 0.76 443 PM 6/13 FRENCHVILLE AIRORT 0.66 438 PM 6/13 FOX BROOK 0.60 444 PM 6/13 ...HANCOCK COUNTY... ACADIA NP 0.36 440 PM 6/13 ...PENOBSCOT COUNTY... PATTEN 1.01 452 PM 6/13 MILLINOCKET AIRPORT 0.66 438 PM 6/13 SUNKHAZE NWR 0.54 448 PM 6/13 BANGOR AIRPORT 0.37 437 PM 6/13 DIXMONT 0.31 449 PM 6/13 ...PISCATAQUIS COUNTY... RIPOGENUS 0.86 446 PM 6/13 KOKADJO 0.69 447 PM 6/13 GREENVILLE AIRPORT 0.62 438 PM 6/13 DOVER-FOXCROFT 0.50 447 PM 6/13 ABBOT VILLAGE 0.45 440 PM 6/13 KINGBURY 0.41 445 PM 6/13 BLANCHARD 0.40 452 PM 6/13 ...SOMERSET COUNTY... TURNER BROOK 1.07 449 PM 6/13 ...WASHINGTON COUNTY... DANFORTH 0.75 450 PM 6/13 VANCEBORO 0.67 451 PM 6/13 PRINCETON 0.63 450 PM 6/13 MOOSEHORN NWR 0.62 445 PM 6/13 EASTPORT 0.56 451 PM 6/13 $$ FOSTER  250 NOUS43 KSGF 132101 PNSSGF KSZ073-097-101-MOZ055>058-066>071-077>083-088>098-101>106-140315- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SPRINGFIELD MO 401 PM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...NOAA WEATHER RADIO TRANSMITTER IN DIXON OPERATIONAL... NOAA WEATHER RADIO STATION WNG-648 IN DIXON IS OPERATIONAL ONCE AGAIN. WE APOLOGIZE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE THIS MAY HAVE CAUSED. $$ LINDENBERG  684 NOUS43 KLSX 132103 PNSLSX ILZ058-059-069-074-079-095>102-MOZ018-019-026-027-034>036-042-051- 052-060>065-073>075-140315- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ST LOUIS MO 403 PM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...SAFETY RULES FOR FLASH FLOODS... A FLOOD WATCH HAS BEEN ISSUED BY THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE. IN THE INTEREST OF PUBLIC SAFETY...THE FOLLOWING SAFETY RULES ARE PROVIDED. PUBLIC AND COMMERCIAL BROADCAST STATIONS SERVING THE AFFECTED AREA ARE ASKED TO BROADCAST THESE SAFETY MESSAGES FREQUENTLY WHILE THE WATCH IS IN EFFECT. AS A REMINDER...A FLOOD WATCH MEANS CONDITIONS IN AND CLOSE TO THE WATCH AREA ARE FAVORABLE FOR DEVELOPMENT OF FLASH FLOODING. PEOPLE WHO LIVE IN FLOOD PRONE AREAS SHOULD CAREFULLY MONITOR WEATHER CONDITIONS AND BE PREPARED TO TAKE IMMEDIATE ACTION SHOULD FLOODING BEGIN TO DEVELOP. A FLASH FLOOD WARNING MEANS FLOODING IS OCCURRING OR IMMINENT. PEOPLE IN THE WARNED AREA SHOULD TAKE IMMEDIATE ACTION TO SAVE LIVES AND PROTECT PROPERTY. FLASH FLOODING CAUSES MORE DEATHS ANNUALLY THAN ANY OTHER WEATHER RELATED DISASTER. MOST FLASH FLOOD DEATHS OCCUR IN AUTOMOBILES. NEVER ATTEMPT TO DRIVE ACROSS FLOODED ROADWAYS. TWO FEET OF WATER CAN MOVE MOST VEHICLES. IF YOUR VEHICLE IS CAUGHT IN RAPIDLY RISING WATER...ABANDON IT QUICKLY AND MOVE TO HIGHER GROUND. SMALL STREAMS...CREEKS...AND RIVERS ARE POTENTIAL KILLERS DURING HEAVY RAINS. HEAVY RAINFALL CAN LEAD TO RAPID RISES PUSHING WATERWAYS OUT OF THEIR BANKS. CAMPERS SHOULD AVOID CAMPING ALONG STREAMS OR CREEKS DURING THREATENING RAINS. ALSO REMEMBER THAT THE HEAVY RAIN MAY OCCUR WELL UPSTREAM FROM YOUR IMMEDIATE AREA. NEVER ATTEMPT TO CROSS A FLOWING STREAM...EVEN A SMALL ONE...ON FOOT. IF YOU ARE NEAR A STREAM AND OBSERVE RAPIDLY RISING WATER...MOVE TO HIGHER GROUND IMMEDIATELY. BE ESPECIALLY CAUTIOUS AT NIGHT WHEN IT IS HARDER TO RECOGNIZE THE DANGERS OF FLASH FLOODS. IF FLASH FLOODING OR RAPIDLY RISING WATER IS OBSERVED...MOVE TO HIGHER GROUND IMMEDIATELY. IF YOU LIVE IN FLOOD PRONE AREAS...BE ESPECIALLY ALERT DURING HEAVY RAIN. FLOODING CAN OFTEN OCCUR WITH LITTLE OR NO WARNING. $$ TRUETT  682 NOUS43 KBIS 132103 PNSBIS NDZ002>005-009>012-017-019>021-034-035-045-046-048-051-141700- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 400 PM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...SUMMARY OF FLOOD PRODUCTS AS OF MONDAY AFTERNOON... FLOOD WARNINGS ARE IN EFFECT FOR THESE AREAS... IN THE SOURIS RIVER BASIN... THE SOURIS RIVER NEAR FOXHOLM...TOWNER...BANTRY...AND WESTHOPE...WHERE RECORD FLOODING IS OCCURRING OR FORECAST. THE SOURIS RIVER NEAR SHERWOOD...AT MINOT 4 NW...MINOT BROADWAY BRIDGE...AT LOGAN...AND AT SAWYER...WHERE MODERATE FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND MODERATE FLOODING IS FORECAST TO CONTINUE. WILLOW CREEK NEAR WILLOW CITY...AND THE SOURIS RIVER AT VELVA...WHERE MINOR FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND MINOR FLOODING IS FORECAST TO CONTINUE. IN THE MISSOURI RIVER BASIN... THE MISSOURI RIVER NEAR WILLISTON AFFECTING WILLIAMS AND MCKENZIE COUNTIES...RECORD FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND IS FORECAST TO CONTINUE. A FLOOD WARNING CONTINUES FOR THE MISSOURI RIVER FROM GARRISON DAM...SOUTH TO THE SOUTH DAKOTA STATE BORDER. AN AREAL FLOOD WARNING IS IN EFFECT FOR PARTS OF ADAMS...HETTINGER...GRANT...STARK...MORTON AND OLIVER COUNTIES IS IN EFFECT. IN THE JAMES RIVER BASIN... THE JAMES RIVER NEAR LUDDEN DAM WHERE MODERATE FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND IS FORECAST TO CONTINUE. FOR DETAILED INFORMATION IN YOUR AREA...VISIT WWW.WEATHER.GOV/BIS. FOR INFORMATION ON RIVER STAGES AND FORECASTS CLICK ON THE RIVERS AND LAKES TAB NEAR THE TOP OF THE MAIN PAGE. $$ SCHLAG  218 NOUS41 KCTP 132123 PNSCTP PAZ065-140130- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE STATE COLLEGE PA 523 PM EDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...MULTIPLE TORNADOES CONFIRMED ON JUNE 12 2011... ...TORNADO CONFIRMED NEAR WINDSOR IN YORK COUNTY PENNSYLVANIA... LOCATION...WINDSOR IN YORK COUNTY PENNSYLVANIA DATE...JUNE 12 2011 ESTIMATED TIME...325 PM EDT MAXIMUM EF-SCALE RATING...EF1 ESTIMATED MAXIMUM WIND SPEED...90 MPH MAXIMUM PATH WIDTH...100 YARDS PATH LENGTH...1 3/4 MILE LONG BEGINNING LAT/LON...TBD ENDING LAT/LON...TBD * FATALITIES...0 * INJURIES...0 * THE INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS PRELIMINARY AND SUBJECT TO CHANGE PENDING FINAL REVIEW OF THE EVENT(S) AND PUBLICATION IN NWS STORM DATA. ...SUMMARY... THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN STATE COLLEGE PA HAS CONFIRMED A TORNADO NEAR WINDSOR IN YORK COUNTY PENNSYLVANIA ON JUNE 12 2011. A NATIONAL WEATHER SURVEY TEAM AND STAFF FROM THE EMA OFFICE CONDUCTED A STORM SURVEY TODAY. A WEAK EF1 TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN IN EAST WINDSOR AT 325 PM...NEAR STATE ROUTE 624 AND MARYLAND AVE. THE STORM LIFTED JUST EAST PLEASANT GROVE ROAD NEAR STATE ROUTE 74. SIX HOMES WERE AFFECTED...WITH TREES FALLING NEAR OR ON THEM. OVERALL...50 TREES WERE DAMAGED OR DOWNED. MOST OF THE TREES WERE FELL IN A NORTH TO SOUTH DIRECTION. THIS INFORMATION CAN ALSO BE FOUND ON OUR WEBSITE AT WEATHER.GOV/CTP. FOR REFERENCE...THE ENHANCED FUJITA SCALE CLASSIFIES TORNADOES INTO THE FOLLOWING CATEGORIES: EF0...WIND SPEEDS 65 TO 85 MPH. EF1...WIND SPEEDS 86 TO 110 MPH. EF2...WIND SPEEDS 111 TO 135 MPH. EF3...WIND SPEEDS 136 TO 165 MPH. EF4...WIND SPEEDS 166 TO 200 MPH. EF5...WIND SPEEDS GREATER THAN 200 MPH. && ...TORNADO CONFIRMED NEAR SPRINGVALE IN YORK COUNTY PENNSYLVANIA... LOCATION...SPRINGVALE IN YORK COUNTY PENNSYLVANIA DATE...JUNE 12 2011 ESTIMATED TIME...330 PM EDT MAXIMUM EF-SCALE RATING...EF0 ESTIMATED MAXIMUM WIND SPEED...75 MPH MAXIMUM PATH WIDTH...50 YARDS PATH LENGTH...3/4 MILE LONG BEGINNING LAT/LON...TBD ENDING LAT/LON...TBD * FATALITIES...0 * INJURIES...0 * THE INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS PRELIMINARY AND SUBJECT TO CHANGE PENDING FINAL REVIEW OF THE EVENT(S) AND PUBLICATION IN NWS STORM DATA. ...SUMMARY... THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN STATE COLLEGE PA HAS CONFIRMED A TORNADO NEAR SPRINGVALE IN YORK COUNTY PENNSYLVANIA ON JUNE 12 2011. A NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SURVEY TEAM AND STAFF FROM THE EMA OFFICE CONDUCTED A STORM SURVEY TODAY. AN EF0 TORNDO TOUCHED DOWN AT 330 PM 1/4 MILE NORTHEAST OF SPRINGVALE...EAST OF RED LION. THE TORNADO LIFTED OFF JUST SOUTH OF BAHNSMILL ROAD AT 331 PM. A COUPLE OF HOMES WERE AFFECTED...WITH ONE TREE DOWN ON A HOUSE. A TOTAL OF 15 TREES WERE DAMAGED OR DOWNED. THIS INFORMATION CAN ALSO BE FOUND ON OUR WEBSITE AT WEATHER.GOV/CTP. FOR REFERENCE...THE ENHANCED FUJITA SCALE CLASSIFIES TORNADOES INTO THE FOLLOWING CATEGORIES: EF0...WIND SPEEDS 65 TO 85 MPH. EF1...WIND SPEEDS 86 TO 110 MPH. EF2...WIND SPEEDS 111 TO 135 MPH. EF3...WIND SPEEDS 136 TO 165 MPH. EF4...WIND SPEEDS 166 TO 200 MPH. EF5...WIND SPEEDS GREATER THAN 200 MPH. $$ BUDD/DANGELO/MARTIN/KOZAR  831 NOUS44 KAMA 132129 CCA PNSAMA OKZ001>003-TXZ001>020-130500- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE AMARILLO TX 320 PM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...HIGH TEMPERATURES CONTINUE TO RISE AT RICK HUSBAND AMARILLO INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT... A RECORD HIGH OF 106 DEGREES WAS REACHED IN AMARILLO TODAY AT 348 PM. THIS BROKE THE PREVIOUS RECORD OF 103 DEGREES SET IN 1924 AND 1953. $$ TAS  909 NOUS43 KBIS 132133 PNSBIS NDZ001>005-009>013-017>023-025-031>037-040>048-050-051-140945- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 433 PM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 /333 PM MDT MON JUN 13 2011/ ...DAMAGE SURVEY NEAR NEW SALEM COMPLETE... SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS CAUSED WIND DAMAGE EAST OF NEW SALEM AT APPROXIMATELY 950 PM CDT ON SUNDAY JUNE 12. NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE METEOROLOGISTS SURVEYED THE DAMAGE THIS AFTERNOON...WHICH OCCURRED ALONG A LINE FROM 4 MILES EAST OF NEW SALEM TO 9 MILES EAST OF NEW SALEM. TWO OUTBUILDINGS HAD ROOFS TORN COMPLETELY OFF AND ONE OF THE TWO STRUCTURES HAD ALL WALLS COLLAPSED. THE LATTER BUILDING HAD DOORS OPEN ON THE SOUTH SIDE WHEN THE STORM HIT. THIS CAN HAVE AN EFFECT SIMILAR TO OPENING A PARACHUTE...SO THE GREATER DAMAGE DOES NOT INDICATE GREATER WIND SPEEDS. NEW SALEM FIRE DEPARTMENT PERSONNEL THAT WERE INTERVIEWED REPORTED SEEING ROTATION WITHIN THE CLOUDS...BUT SAW NO ROTATING FUNNEL CLOUD OR ROTATING DEBRIS CLOUD ON THE SURFACE. ALL DAMAGE IS INDICATIVE OF STRAIGHT LINE WINDS...SINCE ALL DEBRIS WAS BLOWN TO THE NORTHEAST. USING STRUCTURAL DAMAGE INDICATORS SIMILAR TO THOSE USED TO RATE TORNADO WIND SPEEDS... METEOROLOGISTS ESTIMATED THE WIND SPEEDS TO BE 85 MPH. VERY HEAVY RAIN FELL WITH THE SEVERE STORMS...SO ONGOING FLOODING WAS ALSO SURVEYED. ADDITIONAL STORM DAMAGE SURVEYS ARE ONGOING. FURTHER RESULTS WILL BE DISSEMINATED ONCE COMPILED. $$ JP MARTIN/JJT/SCHECK  864 NOUS44 KAMA 132134 PNSAMA OKZ001>003-TXZ001>020-130500- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE AMARILLO TX 425 PM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURES FOR MONDAY JUNE 13 2011... AS OF 425PM...A RECORD HIGH OF 106 DEGREES WAS REACHED IN AMARILLO. THIS BROKE THE PREVIOUS RECORD OF 103 DEGREES SET IN 1924 AND 1953. A RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURE OF 108 DEGREES WAS REACHED IN BORGER. THIS BROKE THE PREVIOUS RECORD OF 103 DEGREES SET IN 1958. A RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURE OF 103 DEGREES WAS REACHED IN DALHART. THIS BROKE THE PREVIOUS RECORD OF 102 DEGREES SET IN 1953. $$ TAS  708 NOUS41 KPHI 132155 PNSPHI NJZ010-012>015-019-020-026-027-141600- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE MOUNT HOLLY NJ 555 PM EDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT... ..NOAA WEATHER RADIO ALL HAZARDS OUTAGE... THE NOAA WEATHER RADIO ALL HAZARDS TRANSMITTER LOCATED IN HOWELL, NEW JERSEY REMAINS OFF THE AIR. TECHNICIANS ARE WORKING ON THE PROBLEM. WE APOLOGIZE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE THIS OUTAGE MAY CAUSE. $$  527 NOUS43 KFSD 132235 PNSFSD IAZ001>003-012>014-020>022-031-032-MNZ071-072-080-081-089- 090-097-098-NEZ013-014-SDZ038>040-050-052>071-140100- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SIOUX FALLS SD 535 PM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...SIOUX FALLS CLIMATE DATA UP TO 530 PM CDT... HIGH TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 77 LOW TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 57 PRECIPITATION SINCE MIDNIGHT..... 0.52 INCHES ...HURON CLIMATE DATA UP TO 530 PM CDT... HIGH TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 72 LOW TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 60 PRECIPITATION SINCE MIDNIGHT..... 0.10 INCHES ...SIOUX CITY CLIMATE DATA UP TO 530 PM CDT... HIGH TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 80 LOW TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 58 PRECIPITATION SINCE MIDNIGHT..... 0.76 INCHES MISSOURI RIVER STAGE............. 33.11 FEET $$  917 NOUS45 KPUB 132256 PNSPUB COZ070-085-086-132355 PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE PUEBLO CO 455 PM MDT MON JUN 13 2011 PUEBLO HIGH TODAY................. 93 LOW THIS MORNING........... 57 PCPN PAST 24 HRS........... 0 PEAK WIND GUST...41 MPH FROM THE SOUTHWEST AT 313 PM MDT. COLORADO SPRGS HIGH TODAY................. 89 LOW THIS MORNING........... 59 PCPN PAST 24 HRS........... 0 PEAK WIND GUST...40 MPH FROM THE SOUTHWEST AT 109 PM MDT. ALAMOSA HIGH TODAY................. 81 LOW THIS MORNING........... 38 PCPN PAST 24 HRS........... 0 PEAK WIND GUST...38 MPH FROM THE WEST AT 340 PM MDT. $$  300 NOUS43 KBIS 132347 PNSBIS NDZ020-034-141200- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 647 PM CDT MON JUN 13 2011 ...PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT... THE ND DOT HAS CLOSED HIGHWAY 1806 IN MORTON COUNTY AT MILE MARKER 84...JUST SOUTH OF THE OLIVER COUNTY LINE. THE CLOSURE WILL BE OVERNIGHT AND POSSIBLY INTO TOMORROW. A DETOUR HAS BEEN ESTABLISHED THAT UTILIZES PRICE ROAD. $$ LTH