Metro ON THE COVER Chuck Gaidica and Paul Gross consult before a Paul Gross at the December 2007 Paul Gross, flanked by Tigers' assistant groundskeeper Gail live report at the scene of the October 2007 groundbreaking of Kol Ami's religious Williamston, Mich., tornado. school wing, which opened last fall. DeGennaro and head groundskeeper Heather Nabozny at a 2006 World Series game. Weather Watcher from page 11 weather and its impact on D-Day in World War II. Gross refers to that film, titled, Forecast: Overlord, as "probably the most significant project I've done at WDIV. Three-and-a-half years of research and interviews around the country culminated in a documentary considered so histori- cally important that it has been added to the official D-Day archives at the Dwight D. Eisenhower presidential library in Kansas, the British Meteorological Archives and the museums of television and radio history in New York and Chicago." Gross Weather Bill When students in Michigan schools par- ticipate in required tornado safety drills, it is because of a law Gross helped create. After learning that no law required schools in Michigan to conduct tornado safety drills, he contacted former State Rep. Gerald Law, R-Plymouth, in hopes of making a change. "He introduced House Bill 5237, that we informally called the `Gross Weather Bill, which reduced the number of required annual fire drills in public schools from 10 to eight and added at least two mandatory tornado safety drills," Gross said. After Gross testified about the tornado threat in Michigan, before both the House Education Committee and the Senate Education Committee, it passed in both. "I joined Rep. Law and Gov. John Engler on March 27, 1998, when House Bill 5237 was signed into law, and I consider this to be the single most important accomplish- ment of my career," Gross said. He attended his first American Meteorological Society (AMS) Conference on Broadcast Meteorology while still in college, later becoming chairman of the group — and he's still involved. In 2005, Gross was named to the newly formed AMS Committee on the Station Scientist, becoming chairman shortly after, a position he still holds. "We coordinate the AMS national effort of encouraging and enabling broadcast meteorologists to add more science and environmental informa- tion to their weather broadcasts," he said. Honored with many professional 12 September 10 . 2009 awards, Gross was nominated eight times for Emmy awards by the Michigan Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences (NATAS) and is the winner of three. Earlier this year, NATAS awarded Gross its Silver Circle Award in recognition of a career of excel- lence and significant contributions to the television industry. In The Courtroom Taking his expertise into the legal system, Gross has testified as an expert witness in dozens of trials and researched more than 1,000 cases in litigation involving the weather or related sciences. Serving as a private certified consult- ing meteorologist since 1986, he works for plaintiff and defense attorneys on cases including those that involve slip and fall accidents, auto crashes, visibility issues, roof failure from excessive rain or snow, and loss from flooding, lightning or severe weather. For clients — including the Michigan attorney general's office — he researches how past weather conditions impacted a specific incident. In a case where a driver claimed he hit another car after being blinded by the sun, Gross was able to compute the exact location and angle of the sun that day and present the findings. In another case involving a car that spun out of control on an icy highway, he determined the condi- tions of the road based on how it was affected by temperature, snowfall and salt. Temple Life Longtime members of Temple Kol Ami, Paul and Nancy both are active in the syn- agogue. He serves on the board of trustees. TKWs Rabbi Norman Roman officiated at their marriage and at the b'nai mitzvah of their sons, who attend the TKA reli- gious school high school. Adam also is a teacher's aid on Sunday mornings. "Paul takes his Jewish identity and his professionalism very seriously, and knows that each of us must participate to the fullest extent possible in making our com- munity better," Roman said. "I have many memories of Paul at TKA — on the roof cleaning away leaves from the gutter; in the basement, stuffing and collecting bags filled with donated clothes to take to a homeless shelter; helping non- Jewish visitors to the synagogue feel more comfortable." Gross reads Torah during services and serves as master of ceremonies for temple events. He represents Kol Ami at commu- nity functions and is involved in interfaith projects including the 2008 Twinning Weekend between TKA and the American Muslim Center in Dearborn. He and Nancy have coordinated TKA s annual fundraiser for Mazon: the Jewish Response to Hunger. Gross videotaped interviews with many of TKA's founding members to help preserve the synagogue's history. He is planning to assemble a collection of the synagogue's historical documents and materials to display. Having done genealogical research, he said, "One of the most important and spe- cial moments in my life came at my two sons' bar mitzvahs, where I presented each of them with all eight of their great-grand- parents' family trees." ' Cancer Survivor In 1989, during a time when Gross' career was on the upswing and he was becoming a familiar member of the news team, he was diagnosed with testicular cancer. "Following surgery to remove the pri- mary tumor, I underwent the harshest chemotherapy available to attack the rapidly growing secondary tumor that was in the lymph nodes behind my left kidney," he said. Returning to work as soon as he could following each round of treatments, Gross said, "My father got up and drove me down each morning at 3 a.m." Longtime co-worker Chuck Gaidica remembers that time. "I watched Paul go through his battle with great dignity:' he said. "Even though Paul was going through rigorous treatments, he maintained his spirit and was a true pro. My admiration for all that Paul is grew immensely. But, my admiration for him as a husband, father and great son can't be matched. There aren't many people that I would move mountains for in my life, but Paul is one of those people." Gross was dating Nancy when he was diagnosed. "She was unbelievably sup- portive, and I'll always be grateful that she stuck with me through the worst of the ordeal:' he said. "In fact, I had seen more than enough and, after the third round of chemo, I was so confident that I was going to win the battle that I proposed." This year, Gross celebrated what he called his "20-year anniversary beating cancer:' When this summer's American Cancer Society Relay for Life of West Bloomfield took place the same day as the local Emmy awards banquet, he chose to attend Relay. Gross received a call at the event telling him he had won an Emmy award. "I have no problem telling my cancer story:' he said. "If I inspire just one person to get through their own battle, then I've done my job." Rabbi Roman takes that hope to heart. "My most profound memory of Paul is a highly personal one:' he said. "As a can- cer survivor himself, Paul was extremely empathetic and responsive to our family as we went through the diagnosis, treat- ments and, ultimately, the death of our son, Justin, five years ago. He reached out to Justin in special ways with a Jewish and respectful sharing of pain. Paul has been a good friend in addition to being a loyal temple member:' On The Field When the Detroit Tigers, Detroit Lions or Michigan Wolverines are in need of weath- er-related advice, they call on Gross. In the late 1980s, after then U-M head football coach, the late Bo Schembechler, told him he got the weekly weather fore- cast from the team's equipment manager, Gross suggested he take over the job. "[Former U-M head football coach] Lloyd Carr told me on many occasions that my weather forecasts were critical elements to his game preparation during the week:' Gross said. "He sometimes spoke to the team about my forecast in meetings, call- ing me 'his pipeline to God:" As a U-M alumnus and fan, Gross said