The GHCN daily station data is used for precipitation, the HURRDAT database is used for hurricane and tropical storm locations, the CRED database is used for disaster records, and the Maharaj and Wheeler real-time forecast is used for the MJO. The period of analysis is 1974-2004. The influence of hurricanes and tropical storms on North American extreme precipitation events is extensive, even away from the most-affected coastal regions. For example, several stations in central Massachusetts have more than one-third of their 10 wettest days associated with hurricane or tropical storm activity. The hurricane influence on extreme events is clearly modulated by the MJO in several areas of Mexico and Central America, with an apparently weaker signal over the US – although this is still under investigation. In the most-affected areas, there appears to be predictability out to at least 10 days, even using an operational forecast of the MJO. Analysis of the disaster records shows a dominant influence of the MJO, with flood and windstorm disasters nearly *twice* as likely during the positive phase of the MJO as compared to the negative phase. Predictability of the disasters also appears to extend to at least 10 days.
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