WESTCHESTERPA wrote:I'll pose the question again: Who is ultimately responsible for quality control at the NHC?
I am going to assume by your question that you do not know much about the weather in general...and about tropial cyclones (Warm-core lows, like hurricanes) specifically. Otherwise you're just trying to get a rise out of people. That can be the only two options.
Hurricane track errors...even with the most well-behaved systems...is unavoidable. Not enough is currently known about the small, unmeasurable changes that can occur to affect track guidance. The earth is a large, dynamic system that cannot be fully resolved with all the super computers in the world put together.
And even if that were done...we could not get nearly enough observations into the model to rule out errors.
The forecast was within an acceptable variance for error with recurving systems...systems turing to the N then NE are amoung the most difficult to peg specifically...hence the HURRICANE WARNING for the ENTIRE southern HALF OF THE FLORIDA WEST COAST.
If you are looking for someone to blame, don't look at the NHC. Look at the god-forsaken media and public apathy.
And to be honest...the forecast process does not need to become any more political than it already is.
The forecast was for a MAJOR HURRICANE at landfall...and the forecast discussions were clear that rapid intensification could occur.
Finally...there is not a Congressperson in Washington that could understand the dynamics. Not gonna happen.
See...the problem is that these types of things happened in the 30's through the 60's all the time. But recently the US has been very lucky.
This type of situation could occur this year...the US has been VERY lucky and that luck appears to be running out.
MW