b'NEWSWIRE:HURRICANE SEASON STARTS THIS NEWSWIRE MONTH, NOAA Predicts Another Active Atlantic SeasonL astmonth,theNationalOceanicof 111 mph or higher) is expected. NOAAThe experts at NOAA are poised to deliver andAtmosphericAdministrationsprovidestheserangeswitha70percentlife-savingearlywarningsandforecaststo (NOAA) Climate Prediction Centerconfi dence.TheAtlantichurricaneseasoncommunities, which will also help minimize issueditsannualhurricaneforecastandextends from June 1 through November 30. the economic impacts of storms.predictedanotherabove-normalAtlantic hurricane season.Now is the time forEarlierthisspring,NOAAupdatedthe statistics used to determine when hurricane NOAAforecasterspredicta60percentcommunities alongseasons are above-, near-, or below-average chanceofanabove-normalseason,a30relativetothelatestclimaterecord.Based percentchanceofanear-normalseason,the coastline as well ason this update an average hurricane season and a 10 percent chance of a below-normalinland to get preparedproduces 14 named storms, of which seven season. However, experts do not anticipatebecomehurricanes,includingthreemajor the historic level of storm activity seen infor the dangers thathurricanes.2020. hurricanes can bringReady.govhasahurricanetoolkitfor For 2021, a likely range of 13 to 20 namedbusinesses,andtheFederalEmergency storms (winds of 39 mph or higher), of whichNow is the time for communities along theManagementAgency(FEMA)appoff ers 6 to 10 could become hurricanes (winds of 74coastline as well as inland to get prepared foralerts and access to preparedness information. mph or higher), including three to fi ve majorthe dangers that hurricanes can bring, said hurricanes (category 3, 4 or 5; with windsSecretaryofCommerceGinaRaimondo. FOGHORN FOCUS: HUMAN RESOURCES 34 FOGHORN'