WGN-TV Chief Meteorologist Tom Skilling and the WGN Weather Center staff provide daily coverage of weather in the Chicago area.

WEATHER EVENTS: March 2005 Archives

2005 Fermilab/WGN-TV Tornado and Severe Storms Seminar

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Our 25th annual Fermilab/WGN-TV Tornado and Severe Storms Seminar is fast approaching and we hope many of you will be able to join us there on Saturday, April 9. Our seminars run approximately 3-4 hours and are completely free of charge. Seating is on a first come, first served basis and the first seminar gets underway this year at Noon on Saturday, April 9. The entire program is repeated beginning at 6 p.m. Saturday, April 9. Feel free to join us for either one. Hope to see you there and thanks for your interest and continuing support of our annual programs! For more information, go to http://www.crh.noaa.gov/lot/severe/Fermilab05.php

Here's this year's line-up of speakers. Warning Coordination Meteorologist Jim Allsopp of the National Weather Service-Chicago Forecast Office was kind enough to put the list of our speakers together:

The 24th Annual Fermilab Tornado and Severe Storm Seminar
Saturday April 9, 2005, Noon - 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. - 10 p.m.
Ramsey Auditorium, Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, Batavia, Ill.

Speakers:

Tom Skilling, Chief Meteorologist, WGN-TV - 15th Anniversary look back on the 1990 Plainfield Tornado disaster and the heart-wrenching coverage of that disaster on television. Plus the report which aired only days later of Paul Sirvatka's stunning storm in progress tornado chase video of the wall cloud which was to go on to become the devastating Plainfield tornado.

Paul Sirvatka, Meteorology Professor, College of DuPage - Post-Plainfield moves to enhance area storm spotter training plus Paul's encounter on a storm chase with the wall cloud which was to become the infamous Plainfield twister. Also, the COD Storm Chase program which has been opened to the public this season.

Jim Stefkovitch, Meteorologist-in-Charge of the NWS Chicago office - Doppler radar's role in the tornado and severe weather warning process. Also a look at the new "polygonal" NWS warnings, which begin in the Chicago area this year, which will better and more precisely target the areas most at risk from incoming severe weather.

Paul Merzlock, Lead Forecaster, NWS Chicago - A look back at the meteorological environment which spawned the deadly 1990 Plainfield tornado and stunning similarities between that tornado and last year's damaging Roanoke, Ill., twister.

Dr. Joe Schaefer, Director of the Storm Prediction Center, Norman, Okla. - Important changes, which become operational for the first time this year, in the way severe weather watches outline the area at risk for severe weather - a county watch system which will more precisely designate areas at risk than the long employed box-shaped watches.

Dr. Mary Ann Cooper, MD, University of Illinois, Chicago - YOU Can Make a Difference in Lightning Injuries. Recent studies have shown that the lightning safety message is being heard by more people and that lives are being saved. Lightning injuries and how they occur, and what you can do to prevent lightning injuries in your own neighborhood.

Brian Smith, Warning Coordination Meteorologist, NWS Omaha - It Doesn't Always Look Like a Tornado. Brian will talk about the 2-1/2 mile wide monster storm that struck Hallam, Neb., as well as other tornadoes that did not look like tornadoes including the Tri-state tornado in 1925, the Lemont, Ill., and Jordan, Iowa, storms in 1976, and the Plainfield tornado in 1990.

Al Pietrycha, Forecaster, NWS Chicago – A brief overview of the April 20, 2004, northern Illinois tornado outbreak, including the deadly Granville-Utica tornado.

Jim Allsopp, Warning Coordination Meteorologist, NWS Chicago - Tornadoes and severe weather hazards - understanding the risks and spotting suggestions.