Rain gauges alone can't capture the full picture—especially when decisions depend on precise rainfall data. Discover how Gauge-Adjusted Radar Rainfall (GARR) enhances precision in flood forecasting, hydrological modeling, and decision-making—right inside AEM Elements® 360.
Why Would You Need It?
If you are involved in any field that depends on accurate precipitation measurements—such as hydrology, meteorology, agriculture, flood risk management, or infrastructure planning—you benefit from gauge-adjusted radar rainfall. It offers a more reliable dataset compared to using just radar or gauges alone, reducing uncertainty and improving planning and decision-making.
This webinar is designed for professionals and decision-makers who rely on accurate rainfall data for analysis, forecasting, and planning.
What you'll learn:
You should attend if you are:
James Logan
Water Market Sector Leader
James Logan has been involved in the assessment, design, development, and implementation of more than 200 automated flood early warning and environmental monitoring systems across the U.S. and abroad. He has led technical delivery and project direction of numerous consulting studies relating to rainfall and hydrologic analysis, flooding, stormwater, dam safety hydrology, and water resource management.
A business leader in the hydrology domain, James has contributed to advancing software, telemetry, and systems design to enhance hydrologic collection, monitoring, dissemination, forecasting and flood early warning to local, state, and federal government agencies with critical missions that depend on understanding real-time rainfall and hydrology. James holds degrees in both Computer Science and Geophysical Engineering. James is a member and contributor to the U.S. National Hydrologic Warning Council's Technical Working Group for the ALERT2 protocol standard.
Mike Zucosky
Director, Software Product Management
Mike Zucosky is an experienced and accomplished leader who brings a wealth of knowledge gained from more than 17 years in real-time environmental monitoring operating robust software systems for clients with critical missions in the flood warning, dam safety and water resource management domains.
As Director of Software Product Management at AEM, he is responsible for developing and driving the strategic vision for the development of the AEM Elements 360 suite of products and other AEM applications.
Mike joined OneRain, an AEM brand, in 2007 as a field engineer and previously led the field services and software development teams as the General Manager of OneRain. He holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Electrical Engineering from Case Western Reserve University and a Master’s Degree in Business Administration from Colorado State University.