#7 Postby supercane » Wed Jun 15, 2011 9:44 pm
Sorry to rain on your parade, but this interesting, well-written proposal, but unfortunately doomed due to complexity.
Currently people understand and respond poorly to warnings, and yet the proposal above splits each type of severe warning into six different levels. In the face of an urgent situation remembering the distinction among the different levels would just add confusion.
Another weakness is that the split levels require much better ground truth and imply much better specificity in predicting the storm effects than are currently available.
Thirdly, the different levels convey a message that different actions are needed for each level, when in fact, this isn't necessarily the case. For instance, the scheme above would imply that people need to take a radar-signature only tornado less seriously than other tornadoes, when in fact if a warning is issued you want to emphasize the message "take cover now." For the Springfield, MA, tornado earlier this month, the system would require an awkward update from Code Yellow to Red within 4 minutes, which causes undesirable mixed messages from an emergency/risk management standpoint. Such a system will likely cause some complacency (yellow's not a big deal, there's no evidence now, so I just wait and see). Similarly, the call to action for a severe storm is similar whether the winds are 50 kt or 80 kt: "take cover now."
More updates are always nice, but the requirements above run into both technological constraints(radar scans take generally more than 1 min, interpretation takes time, trends may not be evident early, uncertainty in storm evolution remains) and psychosocial constraints (changing your message too often may add to confusion).
Also, such a proposal would seem counter to the recent NWS movement to simplify advisories, as we saw with the recent consolidation of the winter weather suite (which was a good move) and the desire to change the current advisory map appearing on the main NWS and each WFO's homepage into a simpler three-tier watch/warning/advisory map a la the Alaska Region (which I do not like).
For these reasons, I find the proposal above, while well intentioned, is too complex yet does not adequately address the initial purpose given as its motivation.
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