“…The research reported here extends these evaluations by focusing on county emergency managers (EMs) in the United States, local-level professionals who apply management, planning, science, and technology to deal with flooding that can cause property damage, disrupt community life, and kill or injure people (Hoetmer, 1991, p. xvii). Do these first-responder experts face the same kind of decision constraints revealed in other assessments of forecast use in weather-related disasters, almost all of which have examined the general public (see, for example, Joslyn, Nadav-Greenberg, and Nichols 2009;Lazo, Morss, and Demuth, 2009;Joslyn and Savelli, 2010;Joslyn and LeClerc, 2012;LeClerc and Joslyn, 2015;Zabini et al, 2015). Only a small number have concentrated on professionals involved with forecasts, such as the forecasters themselves (Demeritt et al, 2007(Demeritt et al, , 2013Pappenberger et al, 2013), experts interested in using flood visualisation tools (Frick and Hegg, 2011), and emergency service providers (Kox, Gerhold, and Ulbrich, 2015).…”