Tim Marshall
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Check out both the web and Weatherwise magazine. If you don't want to subscribe right now, you can often find it at one of the larger bookstore chains. Several tours have now advertised in it.
Check out the rest of the web. There are several tours that advertise here. Don't rely on the advertising alone, though--call and talk to the "tour operator." Discuss safety issues and "expectations" issues frankly. Ask for references. Storm chasing can be dangerous, and it is foolish to put your safety in jeopardy by going on a tour with a leader who feels he/she has to deliver a tornado or die trying.
The following tours are ones we know are led by experienced, responsible storm chasers:
Cloud NineTours
It's possible that the past may be the key to the future in this regard.
To predict what is going to happen after 1995, we may only have to look at what happened prior to 1875.
In the future, this may happen at a sporting event, like a basketball game.
In the past, it was a tornado hitting a river community at the wrong time of day(Natchez, MS 316 dead, 255 were in boats on the river). In 1860, a tornado coincided with a cluster of frail pioneer farms, a town, and a raft on the river. There were 111 killed, many at Camanche, IA.
On April 16th, 1998, the Tennesse Oilers Arena in Nashville was struck by a tornado. Since it was only under construction, there was no sporting event taking place. A witness at a nearby restaurant recounted "Parts of the stadium were being tossed around like Popsicle sticks. I've never seen anything like it."
On April 8th, 1998, incredibly, umpires at a Birmingham Barons/Carolina Mudcats baseball game kept the teams on the field through rain, lightning, flickering scoreboard lights, and the wailing of tornado sirens, until they were told that The Hoover Met was in the path of one of the oncoming tornadoes. They sent players to the locker room and the few fans that had sat through the bad weather to fend for themselves. The "rain delay" lasted for an hour and six minutes, at which time the game started again.
A few years earlier, tornado sirens went off, alarming hundreds of people in a Midwest amusement park, some of which were on a roller coaster. The only sturdy shelters were the restrooms, which had been closed and locked to keep people out of them, possibly for fear that panic would lead to someone being trampled.
The same year,or possibly the year before a tornado passed within a few miles of a county fair in Wisconsin. There were hundreds of people in the Midway and on the fairgrounds.
So, in a word, the answer is yes. Inevitably. Maybe five years from now, maybe 50 years from now. While many of the companies that own these facilities hire private weather consultants and have emergency plans, many don't. Many smaller or less structured groups like intermural school sports or Little League teams also don't have organized plans for severe weather emergencies. Meteorologists, whether from the NWS or a private concern, simply cannot forecast every tornado that touches down. It is beyond the capability of current technology. And even more importantly, they can't force people to act intelligently.