Alarming Deterioration of US National Weather Service Tornado Warnings

From Climate Etc.

by Mike Smith

In spite of better meteorological technology than ever and more raw scientific knowledge about storms, we are seeing a serious regression in a vital government program: the National Weather Service’s tornado warning program.

Tornadoes have been a bane of living in the United States since pre-Colonial times. In the late 19th Century, the Army Signal Corps attempted to create a tornado forecasting service. In spite of some signs of progress, it was shut down because tornado forecasts would, allegedly, “cause panic.” It was said that more people would die from panic induced by the forecasts than would be killed by the tornadoes.

In the 1950’s, the Weather Bureau – forerunner of today’s National Weather Service – was dragged, largely by outside events, into the tornado forecast and warning business. The Bureau achieved significant success in forecasting but, largely because of lack of adequate tools, was less successful with tornado warnings (the short term “take cover now!” messages).

That changed with better-trained storm chasers and spotters, combined with the National Weather Service’s NEXRAD – a national network of Doppler radars installed in the 1990’s. Those radars and the intense, month-long classroom training required of every meteorologist for their operation, led to unprecedented tornado warning success.

Research by Dr. Kevin Simmons demonstrates that 13 to 15 minutes of “lead time” (the interval of time from when a tornado warning is issued to when the tornado arrives) is ideal. From 2005 to 2011, National Weather Service tornado warnings averaged 13.3 minutes and tornadoes were detected in advance 73.3% of the time. At that same time, the radars were being “dual-polarized” to allow detection of tornado’s lofted debris for better tracking. Plus, the new generation of GOES weather satellites, the first that could sense lightning rates (which are sometimes very useful in determining in advance which thunderstorms will go severe or tornadic) was in operation. All of this should have resulted in new levels of tornado warning accuracy.

They did not. The quality of tornado warnings is deteriorating at an alarming rate!

I have been tracking this for the last dozen years. I wrote a piece for The Washington Post in May, 2021, which documented this trend.

By then, the tornado warning deterioration was well underway.

How have things changed since 2020?  We don’t know. The NWS’s tornado warning accuracy statistics used to be out in the open. Now, they are behind a login and password.

Before going further, allow me to stipulate: some tornadoes are not “warnable.” This can be because they are brief, because of problems with technology, or because of our incomplete knowledge of tornado science. These are not the focus of my concern.

The tragic fact is the Weather Service is missing strong tornadoes that are obvious on radar and, in a few cases, even after they are reported by trusted ground spotters and chasers.

The National Weather Service and local emergency management botched the warning of the May 22, 2011, Joplin Tornado which killed 161 people – by far the worst death toll in the tornado warning era. I researched and wrote a book about it: [link]

At first, it seemed Joplin was an isolated event. Now, the tornado warning misses are coming at an accelerated rate. And, the NWS is missing tornadoes across the nation, from New Jersey to Colorado and from Texas to Florida. Here are just some of the poorly-warned tornadoes:

2021

2022

  • Iowa: [link]
  • Michigan (fatal): [link]
  • Kansas City (MO and KS): [link]

2023

  • Florida [link]
  • Virginia [link]
  • Texas (Dallas): [link]
  • Texas (fatal, Laguna Heights) [link]
  • Texas (fatal, Perryton) [link]
  • Texas (fatal, Matador) [link]
  • Colorado [link]

Remember: this list represents only some of the obvious tornado misses in the past ten years. I can provide more to anyone who wants to see them.

I readily admit I don’t know all of the reasons for alarming downward tornado warning quality trend — which is spreading like a cancer across the National Weather Service.

My educated suppositions:

  • The retirement of meteorologists born in the 50’s, 60’s and 70’s who not only were trained in using NEXRAD but learned to issue tornado warnings from early radar indicators such as hook echoes and right-moving thunderstorms. That experience cannot be replaced.
  • The four-week in-class radar and storm warning training for National Weather Service meteorologists has been discontinued. Two retired NWS meteorologists, both requesting confidentiality, recently told me that radar training is woefully insufficient in some cases.
  • Also playing a role is a misguided attempt to cut false alarms without the science needed to do so. NWS tornado false alarms have indeed been cut by 2%. But that is at the expense of issuing quality warnings when a tornado actually exists. The “probability of detection” (a warning out before a tornado touches down) has dropped by a whopping 24 percent!

In the past, the National Weather Service used to do “service assessments” to supposedly assess the quality of the service it provided during particular disasters. These were staffed by NWS, NOAA and related agency personnel. As you would suspect, they rarely found significant fault. Federal agencies investigating themselves is far less than ideal. Tornado-related service assessments have been fewer in recent years as any type of in-depth assessment would force the NWS to acknowledge these issues.

In my opinion, the only way to fix the tornado warning program and related issues is to create an independent National Disaster Review Board (NDRB) modeled after the hugely successful National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). The meteorology part of the NDRB mission would be:

  • Investigate major weather forecast and warning failures. In addition to tornadoes, it would for example include events such as the Tennessee flash flood of August 23, 2021.
  •  The Board would recommend improvements.
  • The NDRB would also take over daily validation of the National Weather Service’s storm warnings and storm forecasts.

The National Disaster Review Board would study disaster response not just from the NWS but would also study FEMA, the Red Cross, local and state emergency management and other entities involved in a particular disaster.

To continue the status quo is to guarantee more lives are unnecessarily lost and that more mega-disasters like Joplin will occur.

Screen Shot 2023-07-11 at 4.10.16 PM

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Scissor
July 13, 2023 6:03 pm

Anyone else get that feeling that they really don’t want you to survive?

Reply to  Scissor
July 13, 2023 10:15 pm

Well they didn’t abort you when you came into the world, so the eco-nazis/doomsday cult has to try something else. Vacuumed by tornadoes, infected by designer viruses, driven to assisted suicide by lockdowns and lack of health care – it obvious they want you dead.

Rich Davis
Reply to  Scissor
July 14, 2023 4:00 am

Fact: Tornadoes mostly affect red states in flyover country.

Fact: Deadly tornadoes are not being detected as effectively as they had been in the past.

Hypothesis: The appearance that tornadoes are getting harder to predict could potentially persuade red state climate deniers that there is a Climate Emergency! ™

Rhetorical Question: Would the Deep State stoop that low?

Opinion: Probably not. This is probably just run-of-the-mill government incompetence.

guidvce4
Reply to  Rich Davis
July 14, 2023 5:36 am

The Deep State would stoop to any level to persuade climate deniers that there is a Climate crisis. Along with the usual government incompetence. Especially with the donks in charge of the agencies.

MarkW
July 13, 2023 6:15 pm

So much money is being diverted to the global warming scam, that real science is suffering.

Reply to  MarkW
July 13, 2023 8:23 pm

Pretty much what I was going to say.

Reply to  MarkW
July 13, 2023 10:23 pm

“So much money is being diverted to the global warming scam, that …” EVERYTHING AND EVERYONE is suffering – wildlife and people. How many animals die in wildfires because activists prevent logging? How many acres of trees cut down or cleared to make way for turbines, panels and extra power lines in rural areas, because activists demand ruinable energy? The price of everything has ballooned because of idiot policies, and everyone impoverished – except close friends of government insiders.

Nevermind ‘tripping points’ – when will society reach the breaking point?

Kpar
Reply to  PCman999
July 16, 2023 9:25 am

“ruinable energy”?

Can I steal that?

Ron Long
July 13, 2023 6:20 pm

I believe the same deterioration is happening across a broad front in federal and some state government agencies/services. A few days ago I saw a report that 77% of young Americans do not qualify for military service. I incidentally gained an FAA Air Traffic Controllers Certification in 1969, and am apalled at the deterioration in the capabilities one regularly hears over the aircraft radios. Let’s see: dumb-down the qualifications, shift recruitment into the WOKE area, give out participation trophies, have a Union that covers for idiots, and only promote those that vote the way you do….what possibly could go wrong?

MarkW
Reply to  Ron Long
July 14, 2023 9:50 am

There are school districts where less than 3% of high school graduates can pass even basic math and reading tests. But they are able to use the right pronouns.

July 13, 2023 6:21 pm

I have children living in north central Kansas this breakdown of federal safety service is very concerning. Govt. hiring now stresses factors not related to ability.
Also the links to the poorly warned tornadoes are blocked by Malwarebytes due to a trojan being detected.

Website blocked due to trojanWebsite Blocked: http://www.mikesmithenterprisesblog.com
Malwarebytes Browser Guard blocked this page because it may contain malicious activity.

Reply to  Thomas Finegan
July 13, 2023 10:27 pm

MikeSmithEnterprisesBlog.com doesn’t look like an official government or institution website – be careful where you surf, there are sharks everywhere.

Reply to  Thomas Finegan
July 14, 2023 8:54 am

I checked the URL with VirusTotal and 90 different anti virus engines reported 0 trojans or malware..
BTW, mikesmith is a Google managed website, I would be very surprised if there was any malware anyway.

Ossqss
Reply to  Thomas Finegan
July 15, 2023 2:18 pm

The site shows clean. It only even put out 2 google cookies beyond its own.

You may have triggered something by not including “s” in the https in the address if you typed it in. The site uses TLS.

Details from one of the scans.

mikesmithenterprisesblog.com – SiteCheck (sucuri.net)

pillageidiot
July 13, 2023 6:27 pm

Any chance that the NWS started hiring on some parameters other than merit starting around 2009-2010?

Tom Halla
July 13, 2023 6:27 pm

I surmise it might be due to the financial situation of local TV stations. Actually having a competent meteorologist on staff, and close enough to be on air during a thunderstorm outbreak is not cheap, and local TV has less advertising revenue than it once did.
I live in Marble Falls, Texas, served by the Austin TV stations, and the staff on the local stations seem well trained and competent. But it is a large market, and I can only imagine the situation in the Panhandle.

Reply to  Tom Halla
July 13, 2023 9:53 pm

NWS is a government service , not one staffed by local TV weatherpersons

Greg S
Reply to  Duker
July 14, 2023 3:32 pm

Local meteorologists can be the last line of defense. Competent ones can read the radar and data on their own. They also have their own systems to track and interpret the weather data. They can properly advise their audience of the severity of storms, often well ahead of time. One I trust here in Cincinnati is Steve Horstmeyer.

Reply to  Tom Halla
July 14, 2023 4:43 am

“competent meteorologist on staff”

heck, who wants that? I prefer the gorgeous mindless babes reading the weather off a monitor 🙂

Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
July 14, 2023 9:00 am

Here’s a nice list.

comment image

Bob
July 13, 2023 6:42 pm

Accountability, accountability, accountability. If detecting, following and warning of tornadoes is the responsibility of the National Weather Service then heads should roll if they aren’t doing their job. People’s lives and property are at stake. I know nothing about how this organization operates but I bet there is considerable money pissed away in the name of global warming/climate change. The first thing I would do get rid of those programs. If the bureaucrats and administrators don’t comply fire all of the head people and ban them from government employment for life. This is not a game.

Lark
Reply to  Bob
July 13, 2023 10:21 pm

I suppose it’s potentially possible that some shift in the climate has made hurricanes form faster and therefore they’re harder to detect in time, but my guess is the same as yours — that the real cause is the change in the government climate. Throughout government these days, you no longer are rewarded for doing your job, but for diversity, equity, inclusion or some other rationale for not doing your nominal job. For the last couple of decades, in fact, not doing your job seems to have become a point of prestige.

mleskovarsocalrrcom
July 13, 2023 7:03 pm

Want an explanation why they are being ignored? Tornadoes aren’t fertile targets of the AGW crowd. Yet.

Reply to  mleskovarsocalrrcom
July 13, 2023 10:31 pm

Tornadoes that kill people are more effective climate emergency propaganda than ones that don’t. Saving people isn’t part of the eco plan – Save the whales, polar bears, seals, salmon, lobsters, cod, sharks, and of course sea turtles – hardly a peep about saving people, and only in vague, incoherent ways like stop us from being underwater a century or a millennium from now.

MarkW
Reply to  PCman999
July 14, 2023 9:53 am

Given the number of whales that are being killed near wind turbine sites, it doesn’t look like saving whales is high on the list of priorities.
For that matter saving raptors seems to have dropped of their radar as well.

Reply to  PCman999
July 14, 2023 10:40 am

Is it possible that installations of large wind turbines are interfering with the Doppler radar?

Sommer
Reply to  Retired_Engineer_Jim
July 15, 2023 8:40 am

An admission was published by the Canadian Government,
https://www.canada.ca/en/environment-climate-change/services/weather-general-tools-resources/radar-overview/wind-turbine-interference.html

Has anything ever been done to rectify this problem?

Frederick Michael
Reply to  mleskovarsocalrrcom
July 14, 2023 10:57 am

The dramatic decrease in the most violent tornadoes is a big problem for the AGW crowd.

https://www.spc.noaa.gov/faq/tornado/f5torns.html

Janice Moore
July 13, 2023 7:31 pm

Given this, “even after they are reported by trusted ground spotters and chasers,”

the explanation is not a simple one.

The abrupt appearance of this meaningfully large error rate is not due simply to poor training or a new false alarm policy.

Something is wrong.

***************

My guess:

“Renewables” scammers rely on death and destruction to push their solar, wind, electric vehicle, “carbon pipelines/ storage, etc..

Failure to warn = greater death and destruction.

That’s why they are hiding what they are doing.

Just a guess.

But, it’s a plausible one… .

Reply to  Janice Moore
July 13, 2023 9:24 pm

20 years ago I would have dismissed this as a conspiracy theory that was laughable on its face. Today…. That exact thought leapt to mind. I doubt it, and hope I am right to doubt it, but with all the insanity these days its plausible enough to be given serious consideration.

Reply to  davidmhoffer
July 13, 2023 10:37 pm

Same here – I hate being so pessimistic about the issue, but we have heard from the activists own mouths, even educated scientists that they want most of the population wiped out and in case you’re thinking they mean through attrition – they offer up suggestions like mutated ebola as a way to make that happen.

They are seriously brainwashed and brain damaged.

Chasmsteed
Reply to  davidmhoffer
July 14, 2023 12:48 am

I don’t go with conspiracy – but if you work for the state, you will receive no plaudits for doing anything that minimizes the appearance of pro-AGW data.
Imagine asking the head of the weather bureau for budget allocation to study this problem – the answer will be “it’s global warming you idiot – what are you ? a science denier”” end of debate. End of promotion prospects as well.
About the same response you might get asking for funds to check if the Earth is round or flat.
Don’t rock the gravy train boat.
It doesn’t matter if people are dying – you won’t be allowed to even suggest something contrary to the narrative.

July 13, 2023 8:51 pm

I suspect that implementing AI and training it with a combination of thousands of radar tracks and GOES satellite data of lightning would improve forecasting. Is the NWS doing this? The fundamental purpose of AI is to accumulate the years of knowledge gathered by experts in a short time and improve prediction by discovering patterns that may have not have been seen before. This seems like a perfect case for it.

Reply to  stinkerp
July 13, 2023 10:39 pm

Couple that with the surge of very affordable and powerful Internet of Things devices to do automated weather watching – the AI would have plenty of broad and dense data to chew on.

July 13, 2023 11:19 pm

Maybe they’re more concerned with pronouns than forecasting.

2hotel9
July 14, 2023 4:21 am

So, NWS is maximizing their personal profit and leaving people to die. Got it.

July 14, 2023 6:23 am

I live in Oklahoma, and we have very good severe weather coverage around here. Tornadoes have a hard time surprising us, although some of them can drop out of the clouds before anyone notices. We have storm trackers that can usually stay right with a tornado and tell the audience exactly what it is doing and where it’s going.

But this article brings to mind something I have wondered about for a while. When we have severe weather coming, I sit here and watch the constant weather coverage on tv, and I can’t count the times that our local meteorologist has highlighted a local storm and says the National Weather Service will probably be designating this as a tornado, and a minute or two later the National Weather Service puts out a tornado warning.

Our local weather people are seeing it before (perhaps) the National Weather Service, but the National Weather Service usually isn’t too far behind, although I don’t know how to account for the five minute difference in warning time after 2011, decribed here. As far as I’ve seen, the National Weather Service is not that late in calling severe weather in Oklahoma. More like a minute or so after it is called by local meteorologists.

OK S.
Reply to  Tom Abbott
July 14, 2023 9:22 am

I’ve wondered that also. Maybe the National Severe Storms Laboratory down in Norman watches the local news stations, and that helps them. I don’t know the exact link in NOAA between the Laboratory and the Weather Service, though.

Reply to  OK S.
July 15, 2023 4:10 am

I would think they are communicating back and forth, but don’t know exactly how that works.

herzberg
July 14, 2023 3:45 pm

New (relatively new) radar programs are designed to report ‘tornadic’ activity in the clouds well before the tornado touches ground.

Historically, tornado ‘WATCHES’ were when tornados were likely and tornado “WARNINGS” were when tornados were observed.

However, now with the radar detection in the clouds, many warnings are issued without a ‘real’ tornado touching down.

Could increased warnings without effect cause complacency? I could see how many don’t believe the warnings.

Warnings use to be “the tornado is on the ground, RUN!”.

Now warnings are “we see a tornado might be in the clouds and might be forming and might come down…”

I think they need a new category and start conditioning/teaching populace to understand the difference.

John Van Stry
July 14, 2023 10:25 pm

Here’s another thing to consider:
I don’t know how it is in the rest of the country, but in Texas there are no tornado sirens anymore. They’ve all been changed to ‘harsh weather sirens’. So whenever someone gets scared, the blow the siren.

Now we can all look out the window and SEE that yes, the weather is BAD.
What we can’t see is a tornado that’s on the ground and moving our way.
And if there was, HOW WOULD WE KNOW?

The sirens are universally ignored now. They’re worthless. They get blown probably over dozen times a year, during some storms, two or three times. But that’s just because someone is scared. There is zero relationship to any tornadoes.

In fact there hasn’t been one around here (in my town, not my county) in living memory. So when one finally DOES come. You’re going to see one hell of a death rate.

Because there is no system in place to warn people anymore.

Honestly? I think they’re doing it on purpose.

July 15, 2023 1:13 am

There is a very real phenomenon of warning fatigue, a complacency that can set in from constantly reporting tornado warnings and then nothing happens. The people in those areas begin to ignore them. Then the one that is really a threat hits, so NOAA sends out its warnings, and the people mostly ignore it.

markm
Reply to  Joel O’Bryan
July 23, 2023 7:08 am

It’s like the warning labels everywhere – they’re not there to warn people of danger, but to CYA for those issuing the warnings.

July 15, 2023 4:20 am

Here’s a funny story:

When I was in highschool, one day a friend and I were just riding around in his car, listening to the radio, and there was a storm front approaching from the west, but back then the radar and weather coverage was minimal, so you didn’t really have a good idea of how the storm was unfolding.

Anyway, all of a sudden the song stopped on the radio and the announcer came on the air and started practically screaming “get out of your cars, and get in the ditch!”, over and over again. Then he said the wind gauge at our local radio station was reading winds over 100mph, which made him think he was in a tornado.

Me and my friend looked out the windows of the car and all we saw was partly cloudy skies and no thunderstorms, and we said, “what is this guy talking about?”

About a minute later, the announcer came back on air and said it was a false alarm, the wind gauge was broken and was giving an erroneous reading! Later we found out that the leading edge of the storm front was actually about 20 miles away at the time.

We had a good laugh over that one. 🙂 We knew the DJ, he was a local guy. He should have just looked out his window.