CENTERVILLE —
The first of four storm spotter training sessions in the area is coming up next week.
The National Weather Service uses the sessions, which are free, to teach people how to safely identify severe weather and feed information back to them. Spotters are taught to tell the difference between different types of storms and tell whether the storm is likely to produce dangerous conditions.
The first session is at Centerville City Hall at 6 p.m. March 12. Other sessions follow at Indian Hills Community College in Ottumwa (6:30 p.m. April 2), the Albia fire station (7 p.m. April 9) and Marion County Public Health (7 p.m. April 11).
Each training session lasts between 90 and 120 minutes. People who are already registered as spotters can also take part in training webinars that cover the same basic information as the regular training sessions.
Trained spotters may also want to take part in the advanced class. It focuses on mobile spotting and teaching a deeper understanding of how "meso scale and storm scale meteorology" relates to spotting. The advanced class is offered both as an in-person class in Ankeny on April 11 and a webinar on April 16.
Information about all of the scheduled classes is available by clicking here.
Community News Network
Storm spotter classes coming up
- Community News Network
-
-
Twitter introduces website security tool after AP account hacked
Twitter is adding a new security tool to its website, making it harder for outsiders to gain access to accounts, a month after a false posting triggered a stock-market decline.
-
Siblings withstand storm in fridge
Brother and sister co-owners of a Chinese takeout restaurant huddled inside a refrigerator to survive Monday’s deadly tornado that claimed 24 lives.
-
Mom delivered baby as tornado struck
Shayla Taylor was so far along in labor that her nurses at Moore Medical Center decided not to move her when Monday's tornado hit. They waited out the storm in an operating room, where the wall disappeared as the tornado hit the building.
-
TIMELAPSE: Take a tour through the damage in Moore
Take a driving tour of the damage in Moore caused by Monday's tornado.
-
Mayor wants tornado shelters in new homes
Moore Mayor Glenn Lewis wants tornado shelters in all new homes in his city, where an EF-5 tornado damaged or destroyed more than 12,500 homes Monday afternoon. A proposed ordinance would require a shelter inside or outside each new residence.
-
AUDIO: Residents share their tornado experiences
Moore, Okla., residents talk about living through Monday's EF-5 tornado.
-
In fan fiction, your favorite characters do what you want them to
When J.J. Abrams took over the "Star Trek" franchise in 2009, he boldly went where the series hadn't gone before — romantically — pairing Uhura with Spock. Many fans disliked the change. Some loved it. Others didn't care, because they just wanted to see Kirk and Spock make out.
-
VIDEO: Orlando shootout tied to Boston bomb suspect
The FBI says it was involved in a fatal shooting near Universal Studios in Orlando, Fla. CBS News senior correspondent John Miller reports that the victim was a friend of Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the older brother suspected in the Boston Marathon bombing.
-
Okla. officials vow not to quit looking until everyone is found
The tornado that killed 24 people and injured at least 100 others in the Moore and Oklahoma City area cut a 17-mile-long path that started in Newcastle and ended at Lake Stanley Draper. Nine of the dead are children.
-
Photos: Aftermath of massive tornado in Moore
Storm victims were pulled from the rubble and residents began surveying the damage late Monday and early Tuesday in the Oklahoma City suburb of Moore, where a powerful tornado destroyed entire neighborhoods and left dozens dead.
- More Community News Network Headlines
-



