Friday,  January 4, 2013 • Vol. 13--No. 169 • 21 of 47 •  Other Editions

News from the

Weather service seeks comments on hazard headlines

• BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) -- National Weather Service offices in more than a dozen states are surveying the public online about possible changes to how the agency delivers winter weather hazard messages.
• Some people might not understand the distinction between terms such as "watch," ''warning," and "advisory," and might not respond to the conditions properly, the weather service states in its published overview of the effort.
• "We want to start a conversation on how we might simplify and clarify our products," meteorologist John Paul Martin told The Bismarck Tribune. Martin is a National Weather Service warning coordinator in Bismarck, North Dakota's capital.
• The online survey provides side-by-side comparisons of actual weather headlines. During heavy snowfall in western South Dakota on Wednesday, for example, the official headline on the Rapid City weather service website notified the public of a "winter weather advisory" while an alternative advised "caution for snow and blowing snow." Some areas got a foot or more of snow.
• Twenty-six weather service offices in 15 states are taking part in the project through March. The majority are in northern states, from Idaho in the west to Maine in the east. Ten of the participating offices are in the Upper Midwest states of North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana and Minnesota, which often see harsh winters.

SD arsonist gets jail time for probation violation

• RAPID CITY, S.D. (AP) -- A man convicted as a teenager of breaking into a Rapid City home and setting it on fire to cover up the crime has been ordered to serve 90 days in jail for violating probation.
• Shye Archambault (ahr-SHAM'-boh) was given a suspended prison sentence in 2009 and put on probation. He admitted to violating probation by drinking alcohol.
• Archambault was 16 years old when authorities say he and an accomplice in 2008 broke into a home while drunk to try to find things to pawn and set the home ablaze in an attempt to cover up fingerprints. The fire destroyed the home. Archambault was tried as an adult.

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