St. Louis Christmas 09 snow/icing event - a case study
This is going to be a rather long post, so please bear with me if you are interested in this issue. Yesterday's (Christmas '09) snow/icing event in the St. Louis area seems to be exactly the kind of event to which this discussion is most relevant. From a meteorological standpoint, this was a low-end event, with snow accumulations of a half inch or less in most areas. But from a human-impact standpoint, it was a high-end event, with, tragically, the death of a Missouri state trooper and numerous freeway closures and pileups in the St. Louis area. News story from Post-Dispatch:
http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/ne...15E011ABF8AC552D86257698000B8679?OpenDocument
In accordance with NWS policy and practice of not issuing advisories for snowfalls of less than an inch, no advisory or warning was issued for this event. Yet, the NWS was clearly aware of the risk and did attempt to communicate that risk through special weather statements and short term forecasts. Here are two examples of several such statements that were issued for various areas; I choose these two because they focus on the STL area where the impacts were greatest:
[FONT=lucida sans typewriter, lucida console, courier]
SPECIAL WEATHER STATEMENT...CORRECTED
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ST LOUIS MO
432 AM CST FRI DEC 25 2009
ILZ058-059-079-095>102-MOZ036-052-061-063>065-074-075-085-251515-
GREENE IL-MACOUPIN IL-RANDOLPH IL-ADAMS IL-BROWN IL-PIKE IL-
CALHOUN IL-JERSEY IL-MADISON IL-ST. CLAIR IL-MONROE IL-PIKE-
LINCOLN-ST. CHARLES-ST. LOUIS-ST. LOUIS CITY-JEFFERSON-
ST. FRANCOIS-STE. GENEVIEVE-MADISON-
INCLUDING THE CITIES OF...CHESTER...QUINCY...EDWARDSVILLE...
BELLEVILLE...BOWLING GREEN...ST CHARLES...ST LOUIS...FARMINGTON
432 AM CST FRI DEC 25 2009
...RAPID FREEZING OF WATER ON ROADS LIKELY AS STRONG COLD FRONT
MOVES THROUGH THE AREA...
A VERY STRONG COLD FRONT IS MOVING THROUGH THE AREA. TEMPERATURES
ARE FALLING AT A RATE OF 10 DEGREES OR MORE PER HOUR. THIS WILL
LIKELY CAUSE RAPID FREEZING OF ANY WATER WHICH HAS ACCUMULATED ON
AREA ROADS...BRIDGES...OVERPASSES...SIDEWALKS...AND OTHER EXPOSED
SURFACES. THIS WILL CAUSE BLACK ICE CONDITIONS...AND COULD MAKE
DRIVING EXTREMELY HAZARDOUS. BE PREPARED FOR RAPIDLY CHANGING ROAD
CONDITIONS. WATCH FOR WET ROADS WHICH WILL LIKELY FREEZE VERY
RAPIDLY AS TEMPERATURES DROP. ALLOW FOR EXTRA STOPPING DISTANCE AND
SLOW DOWN APPROPRIATELY FOR TURNS AND CURVES IN THE ROAD.
[/FONT]
[FONT=lucida sans typewriter, lucida console, courier]
SHORT TERM FORECAST
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ST LOUIS MO
923 AM CST FRI DEC 25 2009
ILZ098>102-MOZ051-052-059>065-072-073-251730-
CALHOUN IL-JERSEY IL-MADISON IL-ST. CLAIR IL-MONROE IL-MONTGOMERY-
LINCOLN-GASCONADE-WARREN-ST. CHARLES-FRANKLIN-ST. LOUIS-
ST. LOUIS CITY-JEFFERSON-CRAWFORD-WASHINGTON-
INCLUDING THE CITIES OF...EDWARDSVILLE...BELLEVILLE...
ST CHARLES...UNION...ST LOUIS
923 AM CST FRI DEC 25 2009
NOW
SNOW CAN BE EXPECTED ACROSS THE AREA THIS MORNING. MOST OF THE
SNOW WILL BE LIGHT...BUT THERE COULD BE AN OCCASIONAL BURST OF
MODERATE INTENSITY SNOWFALL. GUSTY SOUTHWEST WINDS OF 20 TO 30 MPH
WILL FURTHER REDUCE THE VISIBILITY AT TIMES. SNOWFALL
ACCUMULATIONS WILL RANGE FROM A DUSTING UP TO AN INCH. MOTORISTS
SHOULD BE CAUTIOUS AS THE SNOW WILL LIKELY ACCUMULATE ON ROADS.
[/FONT]
These products indicate that there was an awareness of the risks and an effort, within the constraints of current NWS policies and practices, to communicate them. In other words, the STL NWS office did exactly what it was supposed to do under current policies and practices.
The problem, IMHO, is that these products generally reach very little of the public. In this particular case, several circumstances came together to make the situation particularly hazardous:
1. Although there was not very much snow, much of what did fall came in quick bursts that quickly covered the roads. Strong winds contributed to the situation by reducing visibility in blowing snow, and likely making skids harder to prevent/control in areas with strong crosswinds.
2. There was a rapid drop in temperature after a prolonged period of heavy rainfall. Any salt that may have been on the roads from treatment earlier in December was washed away, and more important, the rapid drop in temperature led to some flash freezing of wet areas and assured that the snow would accumulate or turn to ice.
3. Although there had previously in the month been some light dustings of snow and predictions of snow that did not materialize, this was the first hazardous winter driving situation of the season in St. Louis, so a lot of people were out of practice.
Combine all that with the fact that most people heard no advisory or warning and probably did not hear the statements about possible hazardous conditions, and the result was a real mess. As I mentioned in another thread, I was coming back from my daughter's house in Hamel, IL to my house in Edwardsville on I-55 just after noon. This is a distance of seven or eight miles. When I left Hamel, there was a half-inch or less of snow on the ground and snow falling lightly. When I first got on I-55, there was snow blowing across the road but the road was not particularly icy. Still, I proceeded cautiously around 50-55 mph while others barreled by at 70. Two or three miles before the Edwardsville exit, I encountered an intense snow squall with visibility down under 1/2 mile, maybe as low as 1/4. The road quickly became snow and ice covered, and from there to the Edwardsville exit there were at least 3 cars off the road. I am sure the suddenness with which the hazardous conditions developed was a contributing factor, though greater caution and situational awareness could, I would think, have prevented some of the slide-offs.
Would it have made a difference if some kind of warning or advisory had been issued? I don't know, but I would think if it had been it would at least alert people to consider postponing their trip for a couple hours or to drive with greater caution and situational awareness. Then at least people would be making their own informed choices and could not legitimately say they were caught by surprise.
I'm not sure we need another category of warning/advisory, or that use of a warning as opposed to an advisory wouldn't further confuse people about low-end vs. high-end meteorological events. But I do think that, at the least, winter weather advisories should be routinely issued for snow events under 1 inch if conditions are otherwise favorable for road icing/hazardous driving conditions. This is a case where this condition applied, and it was clearly understood before the event that they applied. I think that the NWS policy should probably allow for issuance of some kind of advisory in this situation. In general, advisories and warnings are much more widely disseminated than the kinds of products (special weather statements and short-term forecasts) that were issued for this event.