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Some have posted here that we no longer need FSS and all the bungling
associated with the Loc-KMart transition. I disagree. While DUAT/DUATS, AWOS/ASOS and aviationweather.gov provide excellent graphics, text and aural reports, we still need trained, live briefers to interpret the local conditions. It is the experienced trained, live briefers that have left that we desperately need to be replaced. For example, when I left OSH Saturday morning, I could see the beginnings of an undercast as I flew south towards Chicago. There were some buildups along the lakeshore, but that is normal for the Kenosha area. VFR over the top going around Chicago's west and south sides, the undercast was solid. Continuing eastward across Indiana, there were some gaps in the central part of the state closing again west of FWA. Over FWA the tops were starting to pop around mid-day. I was cruising along at 7500 MSL, the OAT was 60-degrees F. This was an inversion, but the computer access did not tell me that. Not even the two FSS briefers I spoke with during the two-and-a-half hour flight told me about it. One of the briefers I spoke with was a trainee. I knew it from a flight a year ago when I requested enroute weather from another FSS briefer over Tennessee. Similiar conditions prevailed on that day and the briefed provided an very thorough briefing of the conditions and what to expect. The consolidation has truely deteriorated the quality of the briefings we now receive, but I look forward to the improvements to come. The fact that we get shuffled around to far off place when we place a telephone call is not good, but the air-to-ground calls should be answered by briefers who will quickly learn their new local patterns. |
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