Shane Adams
I strongly disagree with the notion some chasers have, that since they go mobile and spend hours and miles in the plains each year, it makes them more professional than a properly trained and equally experienced Skywarn Spotter on a local basis. The internet, with it's many online training opportunities such as UCAR- METED can help equalize the playing field between Spotters and Chasers.
More professional? How about more EXPERIENCED. When you take a person who sees severe weather 20-30 times a year (and follows the storm, seeing behavioral and structural changes, not just what it looked like as it flew by them) VS a person who sees a handful of severe storms a year, there is no comparison. I've sat through SKYWARN classes, and the fact is, if you don't have much/any experience actually OBSERVING severe weather in the field, that certificate is nothing more than something to decorate a wall with. This isn't a critique, it is the simple truth.
I know it shouldn't, but it still bothers me to see people under-value the experience storm chasers bring to the warning process.