Nenana, Alaska, Receives NOAA’s 1,000th Weather Radio All-Hazards Transmitter

October 6, 2008

Central interior Alaskan residents, visitors, barge captains and railroad operators now have access to weather information anytime, thanks to a new NOAA Weather Radio All-Hazards transmitter recently installed on Toghotthele Hill in Nenana, the 1,000th of these transmitters installed by NOAA.

Residents of the Nenana area can tune to 162.4 MHz on NOAA Weather Radio for the broadcasts from NOAA’s Weather Forecast Office in Fairbanks. The broadcasts began as part of a 30-day test period on September 6. NOAA Weather Radio All-Hazards, known as “The Voice of the National Weather Service,” is a continuous 24-hour source of the latest weather forecasts and warnings.

NOAA weather radios.
NOAA weather radios. 

High resolution (credit: NOAA)

“Citizens can now have weather information available at their fingertips any time in the Nenana area,” said John Dragomir, meteorologist in charge of the National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office in Fairbanks. “The Nenana transmitter significantly increases the weather service’s ability to reach Alaska’s central interior directly with weather warnings and forecasts. A NOAA Weather Radio in the home, car, truck, boat and other vehicles helps protect families, individuals and property.”

This radio broadcast has been made possible through a partnership between NOAA, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the city of Nenana. In 2007, USDA awarded more than $415,000 in grants through its Rural Utilities Service program for weather radio transmitters, to extend the coverage of the early warning system to seven communities across the nation.

“Prior to this opportunity, we had to call the weather service directly in order to receive weather warnings,” said Nenana mayor Jason Mayrand. “Often we would hear of hazardous weather conditions through the grape vine. With the new transmitter in place not only do Nenana residents have access but also a large population of people that live in more remote regions of Interior Alaska.”

“Now that the NOAA Weather Radio All-Hazards network has one thousand transmitters, we have the capability to send critical warnings and environmental information to 95 percent of the U.S. population,” said Dr. John L. “Jack” Hayes, director of NOAA’s National Weather Service. “NOAA Weather Radio All-Hazards alerts the public to natural or man-made disasters, and keeps them informed until the danger has passed.”

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