Accuweather reports: meteorologists say that the fiercest lake-effect snow event yet this season — and potentially in years — will ramp up downwind of the Great Lakes late this week and bury some locations with feet of snow, grinding travel to a halt and potentially stamping new marks in the weather history books. Forecasters warn that travel could be difficult to nearly impossible amid the heaviest snow bands, including along sections of Interstate 90 in the Buffalo, New York, area and I-81 north of Syracuse. Snow may pour down at the rate of 2-4 inches per hour at times with thundersnow possible in the most intense bands.
I'm curious to hear how Buffalo and area stations handle this storm, being forecast as major and "fierce". Those of us old enough to remember the 50's and 60's know how stations would have reacted back in the day. Can we get an idea of how today's coverage compares?
The NAB is always telling legislators and everyone else how radio is critical in such situations. I'd like to know if that is still the case. Let's use a real event of significance to grade the industry on its "essential" news coverage.
I'm curious to hear how Buffalo and area stations handle this storm, being forecast as major and "fierce". Those of us old enough to remember the 50's and 60's know how stations would have reacted back in the day. Can we get an idea of how today's coverage compares?
The NAB is always telling legislators and everyone else how radio is critical in such situations. I'd like to know if that is still the case. Let's use a real event of significance to grade the industry on its "essential" news coverage.