NOAA Weather Radio
A recreational vehicle owner in a campground picks up a flash flood alert
on his weather radio and moves his RV to higher ground. Minutes later a wall
of water sweeps through his former campsite. In both cases, lives are saved
by a small radio receiver costing less than a new pair of shoes. Weather reports
and warnings like the ones mentioned above are broadcast by the National Weather
Service directly to home and mobile receivers around the clock. Some weather
radios have the capability to receive a tone alert signal, triggering a built-in
alarm to warn listeners of severe weather announcements.
Since 2002, these broadcasts have been available in the Norwich area thanks
to a grant obtained by the City Emergency Management Office. The new transmitter
broadcasts from a County-owned tower site in the Town of Norwich, on a frequency
of 162.525 Mhz. Previously, the closest transmitter was in Binghamton and provided
a very weak signal to the Norwich area.
Routine information is updated every one to three hours, and the broadcasts
continuously repeat. Weather stations immediately interrupt regular reports
when a severe weather situation requires a live alert or warning.
NOAA Weather Radios are available at most consumer electronics stores and
similar retail outlets.
For more information on NOAA Weather Radio, download
the 8-page, 4-color PDF brochure about the "Voice of the National Weather Service",
including frequencies. (requires Adobe Acrobat Reader-download
here)
Broadcast schedule on
Norwich’s NOAA Weather Radio station.
List of FIPS codes for your SAME-enabled NOAA Weather Radio.
Emergency Management:
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Center (EOC) - NOAA Weather Radio - Preparedness - Skywarn - StormReady -
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