![]() ![]() Paul is a court-qualified meteorology expert who also consults with the legal community in meteorology-related litigation and has testified in nearly four dozen trials since 1986. ![]() Paul testified about the tornado threat in Michigan before the State House and Senate Education Committees, and later joined Governor John Engler when the “Gross Weather Bill” was signed into law. Paul approached a state legislator, who agreed and introduced legislation to require tornado safety drills under state law. During this time, Paul continued to preach at conferences to his colleagues about the importance of doing more of the same type of work.Īfter discovering in 1997 that Michigan law did not require public schools to conduct tornado safety drills, Paul made one of his most significant professional achievements. Paul has since researched, written, and produced eight half-hour documentaries for WDIV, in addition to numerous science, historical, and environmental stories. Paul began pleading with producers to let him work on science stories early in his career. However, it is Paul’s science and environmental reporting that has helped to shift the broadcast meteorology paradigm. Paul became one of the youngest meteorologists ever selected to serve on the American Meteorological Society’s Board of Broadcast Meteorology in 1987, and was named chairman in 1990, owing to his enthusiasm for the subject. Paul was on the air at all three television stations at the same time by 1986, and on two of them on the same day on occasion. Later that year, Paul was hired as an on-air weekend meteorologist at Lansing’s WJIM-TV (now WLNS-TV), and two years later, he was hired as a back-up meteorologist at WKBD-Ten TV’s O’Clock News. Bob Warfield, the news director at WDIV, took a chance on Paul in the middle of his senior year and hired him for a part-time, off-camera job. WDIV meteorologist Mal Sillars chose Paul to be the station’s first ever weather intern during his sophomore year. Paul became more interested in thunder and lightning as he read more about it, and at the tender age of seven, he announced to his family that he was going to be a weatherman at Channel 4 someday. He belongs to a Reform Jewish synagogue, Temple Kol Ami in West Bloomfield, Michigan.Storms terrified him at first, but after his second grade teacher took him to the school library and pointed out a section of books about weather, his fear turned to fascination. ![]() Gross wrote a book titled Extreme Michigan Weather: The Wild World of the Great Lakes State, which was published in June 2010 through the University of Michigan Press. He remains on the AMS's Committee on the Station Scientist. Gross earned a spot on the American Meteorological Society's (AMS) Board of Broadcast Meteorology in 1987, and became chairman in 1990. He would eventually work on the air at two stations in Metro Detroit, and one in Lansing. Gross studied meteorology at the University of Michigan's Department of Atmospheric, Oceanic and Space Science, and he interned with WDIV during his sophomore year, eventually being hired in an off-air position in his senior year. Gross is a meteorologist at WDIV-TV Channel 4, the NBC affiliate station in Detroit, Michigan. ![]()
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