Sen. Katie Britt has become a major voice regarding severe weather detection, especially when it relates to Alabama.
In legislation that she has helped to pass, there is a provision that gives millions in funding to a major weather installation network that provides invaluable weather forecasts for the southern part of the state.
The South Alabama Mesonet, as the system is known, provides in-depth forecasts for Mobile, Baldwin, Escambia, Conecuh, Covington, Coffee, Geneva, and Houston counties.
Britt, whose family was directly impacted by the April 2011 tornadoes, discussed the need for the $3 million increase in funding for the system.
“Across Alabama, families have had to make split-second, life-or-death decisions in the face of tornadoes,” she said. “I know firsthand that funding severe weather detection equipment and putting accurate data in the hands of our meteorologists will allow more people to prepare and get to safety.”
Britt and her husband Wesley and their two children lost their Tuscaloosa home to a tornado April 27, 2011.
A series of 62 tornadoes tore through Alabama in three waves across 35 of the state’s 67 counties, leaving a path of destruction in their wake.
The storms claimed the lives of 254 Alabamians and injured more than 2,000 others. The cities of Tuscaloosa, Birmingham, and Prattville were hit particularly hard — with entire neighborhoods flattened and some buildings reduced to rubble.
She testified in a subcommittee hearing this past April that the funding is “personal” to her.
“I know firsthand that minutes matter, but so do seconds,” Britt said.
On Monday, she called the new funding for the network “critical.”
“As a member of the Senate Committee on Appropriations, I am proud to fight for this critical funding, and I look forward to working with my colleagues to ensure that we continue investing in these essential programs,” Britt said.
The act would also block the Biden Administration’s proposed Fiscal Year 2024 cuts to the VORTEX program, which is used to lower the loss of life and economic damage that tornados can cause.
In 2022, Alabama recorded 98 tornadoes in the state, the second-highest year on record.
Austen Shipley is a staff writer for Yellowhammer News.