Fast, Clear Updates
When Seconds Count.
Storm Trooper Network (STN) is a volunteer-driven severe weather awareness team. During active events, we monitor radar, warnings, and trends in real time and publish plain-language, action-first updates designed for families, schools, churches, and communities— not meteorology jargon.
Severe Weather Awareness That’s Actually Useful.
When storms are moving fast, most people don’t need a dissertation — they need clarity. STN focuses on timing, location, threat type, and next steps. We publish updates you can share in a group chat, post to Facebook, or read quickly on your phone.
What STN Posts — and Why You Can Trust It
We don’t “hype.” We focus on verified information and fast clarity. Our public updates are built around the same questions everyone asks: Where is it? When does it arrive? What’s the main threat? What should I do?
Regional Teams, One Mission.
STN is organized around regional teams to improve local awareness and responsiveness. Coverage varies by season and staffing — our goal is consistent, high-quality updates when risk increases.
More Than Posts.
We’re building a full ecosystem: training, volunteer coordination, public resources, and post-event support.
Choose the Fastest Way to Get STN Updates
During high-impact weather, speed matters. Pick the channel that fits your life — and share STN posts with people you care about in the threatened area.
We’re Built Around Responsibility.
Severe weather communication can save lives — or create confusion. STN’s standard is simple: no hype, no guessing, no drama. We aim to publish information that is useful, shareable, and grounded in verified sources.
If you’re a broadcaster, school, church, or organization that needs fast awareness on big weather days, we’d love to collaborate.
Help Us Expand Coverage.
Donations help fund web tools, training resources, outreach, and relief initiatives. Your support helps STN show up when communities need it most.
Support Life-Saving Weather Awareness
Your support helps expand coverage, training, outreach, and disaster relief initiatives—especially during major events.