Dayton Daily News

Wright-Patt keeps an eye on the sky

Meteorolog­ists’ weather watches help base stay prepared.

- By Barrie Barber Staff Writer

They never stop watching the sky at Wright-Patterson. Seven days a week, every day of the year, and around the clock, someone is watching the weather in a windowless room with a wall of screens filled with radar and satellite images of what’s around the airfield and the world. While storms swirled around the

Miami Valley region last month, base forecaster­s issued a tornado warning.

Gates closed. People took shelter.

And two tornadoes minutes apart May 24 were confirmed spinning just four miles outside the sprawling installati­on.

“Everything that we issue, every weather advisory, every weather watch or every warning has some type of impact on somebody here on this base,” said James Lane, senior operationa­l meteorolog­ist. “It drives actions.”

Atmospheri­c Technology Services Co. of Norman, Okla., has

about a half a million dollar annual contract to employ six meteorolog­ists in the 88th Operations Support Squadron Base Weather Office in a building on the main flight line at Wright-Patterson.

Predicting the once unpredicta­ble

With two airfields and the state’s largest workplace site, meteorolog­ists stay focused on how weather impacts the 8,145-acre installati­on, looking out around a 10-mile radius and beyond to see what’s incoming. And they brief pilots preparing for flights from Wright-Patt to points around the world, telling them what to expect from Alaska to Afghanista­n.

The meteorolog­ists, who have an average of 28 years tracking and predicting weather, say forecasts have become better and more accurate in recent decades. Still, every hour they step outside to check.

Advances in weather radar give greater accuracy to pre

dict and spot tornadoes, they say. “I think because of the technology advances of radar, we’re saving a lot of lives,” Lane said.

Airfield sensors detect lighting, wind speed, visi

bility conditions, and temperatur­e among a plethora of data meteorolog­ists tap into to keep the base weather aware. What they learn has headed up the chain of command quickly.

Col. Bradley McDonald arrived at Wright-Patterson less than an hour when the new installati­on commander got a phone call from the base weather office.

Incoming weather looked bad, and a tornado might be possible, he was told. On that day, a tornado

didn’t drop out of the sky, remembered Lane, who placed the call to the new commander.

Still, since then last year, McDonald said, base meteorolog­ists have alerted him to tornado warnings and incom- ing weather threats, work he

said is vital to “make sure that we have insight so that we can prepare for whatever we need to prepare for.”

Not the National Weather Service

Wright-Patterson advisories or warnings may be different than the National Weather Service, which looks at a broader geographic region, Lane said.

“There’s been instances in the past, not a lot, but severe weather instances where we’ve had a tornado warning out, we’ve sounded the sirens, and nothing has been going on around the local area yet,” Lane said.

Meteorolog­ists interviewe­d could not recall a tornado touchdown on Wright-Pat- terson.

But weather casters kept a close eye in June 2012 on a storm front headed to the base the same day tens of thousands were anticipate­d for Freedom’s Call Tattoo on the grounds of the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force.

When the storm arrived, it packed strong winds that blew over tents, sent debris flying and caused a partial collapse of a stage. The event was canceled before thousands showed up, but 16 people working to get things ready for the crowd were injured, most from flying debris, archives show.

Threatenin­g thunder- storms scuttled the event a second time just before crowds were expected in 2015.

The Air Force Marathon, which brings more than 15,000 runners around the globe to Wright-Patterson, tests weather casters, too.

The series of races are “very sensitive with weather,” said Scott Lutz, a meteorolog­ist. “It could be temperatur­es, it could be just lighting where you’ve got a number of people out on the course running.”

Thundersto­rms scrubbed one of the marathon’s 5K runs at Wright State Univer

sity’s Nutter Center in recent years, weather casters said.

Snow and Arctic-like subzero chills have packed a punch, too.

Nearly two feet of snow fell in a pre-Christmas storm in December 2004, paralyzing the region and Wright-Patterson.

Meteorolog­ist Brent Sullins stayed on the base overnight so he could make his work shift the next day. “It shut everything down,” he said.

Historical records show five inches of snow “will typically shut down the base,” Lane said.

That’s because of the number of parking lots, streets to clear and plows needed to keep the airfield open, meteorolog­ists said.

 ?? TY GREENLEES / STAFF ?? Brent Sullins, a meteorolog­ist with the 88th Operations Support Squadron Base Weather Office at WrightPatt­erson Air Force Base, prepares a weather briefing for the 445th Airlift Wing crew. The office functions much like the National Weather Service but...
TY GREENLEES / STAFF Brent Sullins, a meteorolog­ist with the 88th Operations Support Squadron Base Weather Office at WrightPatt­erson Air Force Base, prepares a weather briefing for the 445th Airlift Wing crew. The office functions much like the National Weather Service but...
 ?? TY GREENLEES PHOTOS / STAFF ?? Philip Studler, a meteorolog­ist with the 88th Operations Support Squadron Base Weather Office at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, shows high-resolution radar that assists in locating potential tornadoes.
TY GREENLEES PHOTOS / STAFF Philip Studler, a meteorolog­ist with the 88th Operations Support Squadron Base Weather Office at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, shows high-resolution radar that assists in locating potential tornadoes.
 ??  ?? Scott Lutz is a meteorolog­ist with the 88th Operations Support Squadron Base Weather Office at WrightPatt­erson Air Force Base.
Scott Lutz is a meteorolog­ist with the 88th Operations Support Squadron Base Weather Office at WrightPatt­erson Air Force Base.

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