The winter storm over the past few days hit communities across upstate New York. There’s a team at the University at Albany that works with state and local emergency managers to help them prepare.
Spectrum News 1 went inside the New York State Weather Risk Communication Center where research and data gets turned into detailed reports.
“We generally create really detailed weather briefings that we distribute to the state’s emergency management sector,” center director Nick Bassill said.
“Things like air quality from the DEC, the drought report, a hurricane outlook, National Weather Service alerts. There’s a lot of information that goes into it,” said Allison Finch, lead meteorologist for the facility at UAlbany.
Students and faculty work seven days a week, sending tailored weather information to state and local emergency managers so they can plan for storms.
“Those are the different colors associated with every National Weather Service product out there,” Bassill said. “So, we can get a sense of sort of the who, what, where, when of different weather affecting the state.”
And what they track on their screens shows up as what people feel outside, from heavy snow to strong winds and storm damage across the state.
“That allows the state or county or whoever you’re talking about in the public sector to be able to respond to that better, and then make informed decisions that protect lives, lives and property,” Bassill said.
As one storm made its way through the state, they were already focused on the next.
“Today, we’re looking at, you know, what is the storm that just happened overnight, continuing to do today,” Finch said. “Recapping it a little bit, you know, calling out those peak ice totals or gusty winds. And then we’re talking about the lake-effect snow that will continue throughout the week.”