This article was originally published May 13, 2015

National weather summit features UNL researchers

Clint Rowe (left) and Adam Houston (second from left) showcase the touchscreen video wall in UNL's recently remodeled Meteorology-Climatology Computer Lab in Bessey Hall. Rowe and Houston are participating in a two-day Weather Day on the Hill summit in Washington, D.C.
Craig Chandler | University Communications

Craig Chandler | University Communications
Clint Rowe (left) and Adam Houston (second from left) showcase the touchscreen video wall in UNL's recently remodeled Meteorology-Climatology Computer Lab in Bessey Hall. Rowe and Houston are participating in a two-day Weather Day on the Hill summit in Washington, D.C.

UNL faculty visited the nation’s capital to share weather-focused research with legislators, industry leaders and colleagues.

Clint Rowe and Adam Houston, faculty in the Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, participated in a May 13-14 summit coordinated by the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research.

Known as Weather Day on the Hill, the summit features panel discussions and exhibits intended to inform decision-makers and stakeholders about forecasting, the private sector’s role in meteorological enterprises, and legislative issues related to weather.

UNL was one of seven universities invited to attend the Washington, D.C.-based summit. Rowe and Houston outlined UNL research projects and educational activities at the event before meeting with a staffer from the office of Nebraska Sen. Deb Fischer.

“Our primary purpose is simply to showcase the high-quality research in the atmospheric sciences that is conducted at UNL,” said Rowe, one of several faculty who met with President Barack Obama’s chief science adviser on May 6 to discuss climate change.

Formed in 1959, the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is a consortium of 105 institutions that promote research activities in the atmospheric and related sciences. UNL joined the consortium in 1979.