Stations do
great public service with
coverage
Aug. 29,
2004 -- When
Hurricane Charley made an
unexpected trip up Interstate 4
on Aug. 13 -- Friday the 13th of
all days -- the storm became part
of Central Florida lore. There
had not been a hurricane like
this to hit the region in more
than 40 years. Fortunately,
television news had advanced
considerably since Hurricane
Donna slammed Orlando on Sept.
11, 1960. Thanks to their
experience, their commitment to
cover the story, their
competitive natures and their
technology -- not the least of
which was Doppler radar and
storm-tracking software -- the
area stations helped Central
Floridians prepare for and
weather the "I-4
storm." Meteorologists at
Orlando stations alerted viewers
the storm was heading directly
here around noon Friday -- hours
before the National Hurricane
Center would acknowledge a change
in the storm's path. Exactly
which station first predicted the
storm's new path has been a
matter of great debate. WFTV's
Tom Terry was credited originally
for making the call, but WKMG and
WESH both have said they too
reported a change in the storm's
path before the Hurricane Center.
It was big news.
Most everyone had gone to bed
Thursday night and to work on
Friday morning thinking the storm
was going to come ashore
somewhere near Tampa and give
Orlando a glancing blow as it
moved across the peninsula. By
noon, every Central Florida
station was warning that it was
going to be much worse than
anticipated here. Terry was
telling viewers to get home
before 2 p.m. Many stopped at
grocery stores (that ones which
were still open at that point) to
get last-minute supplies. I got a
call from my wife while I was in
a check-out line telling me the
storm -- which had just been
upgraded to Category 3 -- was now
a Category 4 storm. Yikes!
I think WESH was the
first station to start
wall-to-wall coverage, but the
others quickly followed. Even
Central Florida News 13, the
Bright House cable station,
abandoned its recorded news wheel
and went with hours and hours of
live coverage. WB18, which
doesn't have a news department
any more, ran a crawl with
hurricane information.
WOPX-Channel 56, the Pax
affiliate out of Melbourne, began
simulcasting WESH's coverage.
(And that was a lesson for next
time. WESH's transmitter is
located north of Orlando in
Orange City. With no cable or
satellite, it's nearly impossible
to get a picture on Channel 2.
But Pax's UHF signal on Channel
56 comes in pretty clear with an
old "rabbit ear"
antenna. Too bad it switched to
NBC's Olympic coverage just as
the storm was approaching.)
When a feeder band
came across the region in the
early afternoon as a prelude to
Charley's arrival, things started
to quiet down. Businesses were
closed, streets were deserted.
The stations used all the
technology at their disposal to
cover the storm's approach. From
reporters doing live shots in the
southern part of the state to
utilizing Department of
Transportation cameras along I-4,
we watched as the storm worked
its way toward us.
The worst of it for
the Orlando area came around 9:30
or so. There was a 105 mph wind
gust at Orlando International.
Those DOT cameras showed powerful
winds whipping sheets of rain and
rocking light poles and traffic
signals. WFTV's camera atop the
SunTrust bank building in
downtown Orlando was shaking like
there was a huge earthquake going
on below. From its bird's-eye
view, you could see power
transformers flashing and lights
going off and on all across the
downtown area.
As the storm was
toppling hundreds of trees in
downtown Orlando, Terry told
viewers the station was running
on generators -- but you wouldn't
have known from the on-air
product. WKMG-Channel 6 wasn't as
lucky. It lost power and had
generator problems. Finally, the
station got back on the air by
using one of its live trucks --
supplying power to two lights and
two microphones in the studio for
the anchors and to the tower
outside to send a signal to
WKMG's transmitter. It was
bare-bones broadcasting -- no
graphics, no lights and,
unfortunately, no weather radar
-- but it was broadcasting. And,
even more important, with so many
in Central Florida without power,
WKMG's broadcasts allowed it to
continue providing coverage on FM
radio. (WKMG's audio signal -- as
is the audio of all Channel 6's
in the U.S. -- is carried on 87.7
FM.)
I mean no disrespect
to the hard-working folks at
WESH, WKMG, WOFL or Central
Florida News 13, but WFTV and Tom
Terry stood out with their
extraordinary coverage. At the
height of the storm, I wasn't
concerned with flipping around
the dial to see who was doing the
best job. We just kept the TV on
WFTV. Terry and the team of folks
staffing the station's relatively
new Severe Weather Center 9 gave
a minute-by-minute account of the
storm's approach and what to
expect. They constantly updated
graphics to show the storm's
exact path and expected wind
gusts. Their Doppler radar and
associated software were able to
tell the story of the storm in an
easy to understand way. They
would focus in on an area and
show what the winds were. They
would zoom out and show where the
rough weather was and where it
was headed. They checked
rain-fall totals. And through it
all, Terry's businesslike
demeanor kept everyone calm. That
included me.
While watching
WFTV's coverage and hearing Terry
mention one nasty feeder band was
heading toward our area, he again
repeated that everyone should be
in a safe interior area away from
windows. My weather station was
showing the winds outside were
about 50 mph -- but it sounded
like 150 to me. My wife, son and
I decided we're ride out the rest
of the storm in our utility room.
Not too long after we got in
there (with our two dogs), some
debris came crashing through our
kitchen window. Scared the hell
out of all of us. But, with a
small TV somehow also squeezed
into the utility room with us, we
watched Terry's radar images and
realized the worst for us would
be over in about 30 minutes. It
was the longest 30 minutes I've
ever waited in my life as we kept
hearing more glass break and wind
whipping into our house. But,
just as the radar indicated,
things began to settle down.
Compared with the
damage others had, we couldn't
complain. We lost most of the
shingles and paper from our roof,
the top of our chimney was torn
off, the backyard fence and the
big oak in the front yard were
down, and we had lots of leaks
inside the house. But we were
safe and had electricity!
As storm continued
it path along I-4, it finally
exited the state and went out to
the Atlantic. WFTV ended its
coverage around midnight; WESH
and WOFL signed off around 12:30
a.m. WKMG, which was barely
broadcasting, made the decision
to stay on the air the rest of
the night. A lot of folks have
asked what good was served by
that decision, but if I were
alone in a damaged house without
electricity, I think hearing a
familiar voice on the radio or on
a battery-operated TV would be
pretty comforting in such a
hectic and scary situation. And,
as Local 6's reporters made their
way back to the station with
their video, it became apparent
just how widespread the damage
was across the region. That was
something the other stations
wouldn't pick up on until their
came back with their newscasts
around 5:30 a.m. And anchor Bob
Frier must have set some sort of
Central Florida record -- being
on the air for nearly 18 hours
with just a few short breaks in
between.
In
the two weeks since the storm
left Central Florida, we've come
to rethink the definition of
hero. Can't you include the
neighbor who came over to cut a
tree out of your driveway? The
stranger who offered you a cold
bottle of water while standing in
line for repair supplies? The
utility crew working to restore
your power? I don't think it's a
stretch to include Central
Florida's TV (and print)
journalists among the group of
heroes for the public service
they provided covering the storm
and seeing us through it.
Thanks.
Video from
Hurricane Charley coverage
>> WFTV - 105
mph wind gust at airport
>> WFTV - Storm
rocks downtown Orlando
>> WFTV - Power
one and off in downtown
>> WFTV -
Severe Weather Center crew gets
thanks
>> WKMG - In
the dark but broadcasting
>> WKMG - Is
the power coming back?
Frame grabs
from Hurricane Charley coverage
(click on
images for larger photos)
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