Coverage starts thirty days after activation, so don't wait until
the next hurricane warning to get covered.
Not exact matches
«There is the danger of life - threatening storm surge inundation in portions of central and southern Florida, including the Florida Keys, during the
next 36 hours, where a Storm Surge
Warning is in effect,» the National
Hurricane Center explained in a Saturday morning update.
Imagine knowing how your city or state will cope with drier and warmer conditions over the
next 30 years; imagine getting a tornado
warning an hour in advance providing an opportunity to get your family properly sheltered; imagine being able to evacuate only those coastal residents that will be directly impacted by a
hurricane and not unnecessarily clearing hundreds of miles of the coast; imagine being able to tell a fire incident manager where the fire front will be in 6 hrs; imagine airline routing system that knows where a squall line will be in 12 hrs and the resulting efficiency in airport acceptance rates; or imagine air quality predictions that would allow the time for special precautions to be taken for those at risk.
Then, as it gets closer, we issue a
hurricane warning, which means we're expecting
hurricane conditions somewhere in the
warning area within the
next 36 hours.