 Westminster, MD (November 10, 2016) – Officials from
NOAA’s National Weather Service today praised Carroll County’s emergency management
team for completing a set of rigorous criteria necessary to earn the
distinction of being declared StormReady.
StormReady is a nationwide community
preparedness program that uses a grassroots approach to help communities
develop plans to handle local severe weather and flooding threats. The program
is voluntary, and provides communities with clear-cut advice from a partnership
between local National Weather Service offices and state and local emergency
managers. StormReady started in 1999 with seven communities in the Tulsa,
Okla., area. There are now more than 940 StormReady communities in 47 states.
“Carroll
County’s achievement of becoming StormReady enhances the relationship between
the county and NOAA’s National Weather Service,” said Chris Strong, warning
coordination meteorologist of the Baltimore/Washington
National Weather Service Forecast Office in Sterling, Va. “Through
StormReady, the county will be better prepared to help protect the lives and
property of its citizens during severe weather events.”
“Safeguarding
our communities from dangerous weather and other potential threats is a daily
priority in Carroll County, and we appreciate this recognition from our
partners at the National Weather Service,” said Board of County Commissioners
President Stephen Wantz. “Being StormReady means Carroll County is using the
right combination of technology, planning and good old-fashioned legwork. We
cannot prevent hurricanes or winter storms, but we are doing everything we can
to ensure that we are prepared.”
At today’s
Board of County Commissioners Open Session, National Weather Service officials
presented a StormReady recognition letter and special StormReady signs to
county officials. The StormReady recognition will be in effect for three years,
at which time the county will go through a renewal process.
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