A world without warnings?

— As early as October 22, when Hurricane Sandy was just a churning spout of turbulence in the distant Atlantic, the National Hurricane Center in Miami was already warning that it could develop into a storm with potentially devastating impact on the East Coast.

One computer model showed Sandy growing into a monster hurricane with a lethal punch, aiming directly for the mid-Atlantic.

You know the rest—the worst-case scenario became reality. Today, that part of the country is reeling from the beating Sandy delivered.

But residents can’t say they didn’t have sufficient time to prepare for the onslaught. They had at least one week.

In places like Somerset County, N.J., officials warned on October 23rd that a potential flood could develop if Sandy showed up on the state’s doorstep. They issued alerts asking residents to start getting ready just in case.

By that Friday, the models were highly predictive, pointing to a mid-Atlantic hit around Delaware and New Jersey, with forceful winds, rising water and massive tides endangering coastal areas for hundreds of miles. And that’s exactly what happened.

The tireless effort by weather forecasters made a difference. All the work and money that go into developing and maintaining a first-class meteorological service paid off.

Here’s what you may not know: Advance warnings, made possible by an array of images and information delivered by satellite, could be a thing of the past. Or, almost as bad, they could be less accurate, and less timely, due to a looming gap in our weather eye in the sky.

We won’t bore you with the details. Questions over cost estimates, satellite design, unfilled management vacancies, etc. Outside the Beltway, this is called fumbling and incompetence.

The data these satellites deliver is indispensable to the work that goes into preparing accurate forecasts. Without it, forecasters can’t predict how big a storm will be, where it will go (until it’s rattling your windows), and how far its effects could be felt. In other words, they would be half-blind.

That’s a recipe for disaster. A spokesman for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration told the New York Times recently that delivering timely and accurate storm forecasts remained a top priority.

That’s little comfort, however, considering that the under-secretary of Commerce issued a memo calling the weather satellite system “this dysfunctional program that has become a national embarrassment.” Not exactly reassuring.

In natural disasters, the old adage that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure is spot-on. Government response after the event is crucial, but being prepared is even better.

Quibbling over money or management changes when lives are at stake seems both silly and callous. Florida and every other part of the country at the mercy of windstorms must be able to count on timely and accurate forecasts. We urge Congress and the next president to take this issue seriously.

Editorial, Pages 80 on 11/04/2012

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