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NEW PROGRAM OFFERS SPECIAL PRICE FOR LIFE-SAVING NOAA WEATHER RADIO
"Operation Warn," an initiative to make available 100,000 specially-priced NOAA Weather Radios to Oklahoma City area residents by the end of 2002, was announced today by project coordinators from the Oklahoma City Emergency Management, Oklahoma Department of Civil Emergency Management and NOAA's National Weather Service. "Following the nighttime tornadoes in Georgia earlier this week, and in Oklahoma last May, people credited the advanced warning received from their NOAA Weather Radios with saving their lives," said Dennis McCarthy, meteorologist in charge of the National Weather Service (NWS) Norman Forecast Office, which provides warnings and forecasts for central and western Oklahoma and part of north Texas.
According to McCarthy, "NOAA Weather Radios with alarms are the surest way to protect your family. We encourage everyone to equip their homes, schools, businesses and public places with this life-saving device. We want to make NOAA Weather Radios as common as smoke detectors," he said. NOAA Weather Radios with new digital technology called Specific Area Message Encoding (SAME) and battery back-up system can provide early warning of severe weather in the immediate area, especially during the night, alerting residents to turn to commercial televisions and radios for more information. Continuous weather information,
including life-saving messages such as severe weather watches
and warnings, is broadcast directly to the national network's
special radio receivers 24 hours a day. SAME technology allows
the NOAA Weather Radio to receive a tone alarm signal, triggering
a built-in alarm to sound and the radio to turn itself on, providing
listeners with severe weather announcements for the county where
they live. Tornado Research and Technology: Oceanic
and Atmospheric Research,
Silver Spring, Md. More Information Additional information including tornado background information, and facts about deadly and destructive U.S. tornados can be found on the following Web page: http://www.outlook.noaa.gov/tornadoes.
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