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Monitoring Tsunami Impacts Across the Pacific; Air Quality Concerns; Dangerous Heat; Critical Fire Weather for the West

Tsunami impacts continue for portions of the Pacific basin. Wildfire smoke causes unhealthy air in Midwest to Great Lakes. Heat dome spans Mississippi Valley to Mid-Atlantic with excessive heat warnings and advisories. Critical fire weather in Great Basin to Pacific Northwest (dry thunderstorms). Cold front spawns severe storms/heavy rain in Central U.S. today, shifts to East Coast Thursday. Read More >

...Flood and wildfire season...know your risks...make your plans...improve your outcome...

 

The National Weather Service wants everyone in the United States to be part of a Weather-Ready Nation.  Colorado has more than its fair share of floods, flash floods, and wildfires.  You should be weather-alert and weather-ready, knowing how to stay safe when floods and wildfires affect your area.

Governor Polis has proclaimed the week of March 3rd through 9th as Colorado Flood Safety and Wildfire Awareness Week. Now is the time to learn about flood and wildfire risks in Colorado, and to develop your plans to improve your outcome.   

Floodprone areas have been identified in over 250 cities and towns and in all 64 counties in Colorado. Over 250 thousand people live in floodplains in Colorado. There are estimated to be 65 thousand homes and 15 thousand commercial, industrial, and business structures in identified floodplains. There are likely many more structures located within unmapped flood hazard areas. The value of the property, structures, and contents located in the identified floodplains is estimated to be around 15 billion dollars.

Floods and flash floods have killed over 400 people in Colorado since the turn of the 20th century.  The historic weather pattern of September 2013 reminds us all that floods are a major concern across the Centennial state.  Floods have caused billions of dollars in damage in Colorado.  

On average 2500 wildfires occur across Colorado each year. Since 2012, 8 people have been killed when wildfires occurred in the wildland-urban interface.  

The National Weather Service forecast offices which serve Colorado will issue a series of public information statements during this Flood Safety and Wildfire Awareness Week, covering the following topics:

Sunday........ Introduction to the week (this web page)

Monday........Flood watches and warnings

Tuesday.......River and areal floods

Wednesday...Flash floods

Thursday......Fire weather forecasts...watches...and warnings

Friday...........Wildfire safety and mitigation

Saturday.......Review of the week

 

More information on floods and wildfires is available at your local National Weather Service web sites:

     weather.gov/boulder      NWS Denver/Boulder

 

     weather.gov/pueblo     NWS Pueblo

 

     weather.gov/goodland   NWS Goodland

 

     weather.gov/gjt            NWS Grand Junction