Dayton Daily News

Springfiel­d meteorolog­ist to appear on national show

Assurant employee predicts weather’s impact on clients.

- By Matt Sanctis

A Springfiel­d meteorolog­ist specializi­ng in predicting how catastroph­ic storms will affect insurance clients will appear on a national Weather Channel show on Sunday.

Bryan Wood started his career at Assurant’s Global Housing Division as a call center representa­tive but worked his way into an unusual job predicting how weather patterns might impact the company’s clients. Now Wood is scheduled to appear on the show “Weather Geeks” at noon Sunday on the Weather Channel.

Assurant didn’t have a meteorolog­ist when he arrived but Wood said they soon saw value in what he could offer.

The business, one of Springfiel­d’s biggest employers, now uses weather forecasts to predict what resources might be needed to provide insurance services more quickly in case of severe weather damage. The company’s Global Housing Division provides insurance and related services in partnershi­p with financial institutio­ns and other major clients. It has more than 1,800 workers.

“Having been on site after some of these disasters, it’s important to take what I know and work with that informatio­n to enable our clients to make sure our cus-

tomers are taken care of,” Wood said. “When you get down to these places you see the amount of stress and fatigue on people’s faces. They’re not living in their house. They might be living in a hotel or an apartment. Homes are your place of comfort and safety and suddenly that’s been taken away from you.”

Wood, an Akron native, was about 5 years old when he began watching Cleveland Meteorolog­ist Dick Goddard. Those broadcasts sparked a lifelong interest in weather, he said.

“I just started asking questions and my parents got me books from the library,” Wood said. “I’ve never stopped asking questions I guess. They’ve just become a lot more complex and difficult questions.”

Wood’s career took an unusual path. He initially studied his craft at Ohio State University, but dropped out and eventually moved to Fairborn. His career at Assurant started as a call center representa­tive, but he spoke up when a manager began asking questions about why the company was fielding more calls from storm damage, he said.

The company paid for him to complete an online meteorolog­y degree at Mississipp­i State University and he became its first meteorolog­ist.

Most newscasts about the weather focus on what viewers can expect for the days ahead. Wood said his job demands that he look further ahead.

“I’m more in the forecastin­g side looking at whether there could be a severe weather outbreak,” Wood said. “This time of year it’s a lot of watching the Atlantic Ocean if we see a potential threat down the road for a hurricane. We have plans already in place, but do we need to start activating those plans as soon as something happens so we’re there and ready to help people?”

Mike Chesterfie­ld, executive producer at “Weather Geeks,” said they initially discovered Wood through social media. The show, now in its fourth season, lasts a half-hour. It’s hosted by Marshall Shepherd, former president of the American Meteorolog­ical Society.

Past guests on the show have included everyone from Environmen­tal Protection Agency staff to tornado chasers. On the show, Wood provides advice to viewers on how to prepare for a weather disaster.

“Think about ‘Meet the Press’ except it’s for weather geeks,” Chesterfie­ld joked.

Wood’s idol Goddard was on television for more than 50 years. But Wood said he’s satisfied with his brief time on the Weather Channel.

“I always had a dream of being on the Weather Channel just because it was an outlet for my nerddom from a young age,” Wood said. “I kind of walked away from the TV side of that dream a while back. I had no idea that insurance hired meteorolog­ists. It was kind of surreal last week walking into that studio and taping that show.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Marshall Shepherd (left) on the set of the Weather Channel with Bryan Wood, a meteorolog­ist with Assurant, one of Springfiel­d’s biggest employers.
CONTRIBUTE­D Marshall Shepherd (left) on the set of the Weather Channel with Bryan Wood, a meteorolog­ist with Assurant, one of Springfiel­d’s biggest employers.

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