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NOAA's NWS Focus
January
6, 2003 |
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Forecaster Brian Montgomery
of the NWS Detroit/Pontiac Weather Forecast
Office (WFO), discusses severe weather and tornadoes
in an interactive video teleconference with
Macomb County, MI, students December 5, 2002.
Read more about it by following
this link.
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Take
a look at other NWS news, as submitted for the NOAA
Weekly Report
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Click
here to take a look at NOAA-wide employee news, as posted
in the latest issue of AccessNOAA
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2003 New
Year Message: The Future is Now
by Jack Kelly,
NWS Director
2003 will be marked
by important changes. By the end of the year, we will have
implemented the Interactive Forecast Preparation System (IFPS)
and our partners and customers will be using the National
Digital Forecast Database. NOAA will soon release a new Strategic
Plan and a new NWS Strategic Plan will follow on its heels.
In the coming weeks, an independent National Academy of Sciences
committee will release its report on partnerships in the provision
of weather and climate services. This study should help clarify
appropriate roles of government, private sector, and the academic
and research communities for providing weather and climate
services. One thing will remain constant this year - our commitment
to customers and partners and remaining the best weather service
in the world.
To thrive in our changing, fast-paced and technology-driven
world, we must constantly ensure our work processes and
services are relevant and meet varied and evolving user
needs. Traditionally, our service approach has been schedule-driven,
product-oriented, and two-tiered. National Centers produce
"national" level products and local forecast offices produce
"local" products. We use words to link forecasters and citizens.
We must ask ourselves questions - Do we issue information
that is understandable and useful to our partners and customers?
Does our data translate into information that is useful
for our most important customer - the American public? Have
we documented our changing products and services, given
all of our partners and customers a meaningful opportunity
to comment on the change, and responded appropriately to
their comments?
Technology and scientific advances now enable us to employ
an improved forecast process to meet the emerging demands
of our customers. This process will be interactive, collaborative
and information oriented, and will require the skill of
the entire NWS workforce. IFPS depends on the strength of
our forecast team to produce local and national products,
the technical teams to keep the systems running and data
flowing, and management and administrative teams to support
both of these processes. Collaboration gives everyone joint
ownership of forecasts rather than someone having ownership
of individual words. We are entering an era where boundaries
between products blend together to bring out the best in
services.
By the close of 2003, each local office will use IFPS
technology to produce consistent, current, high quality,
and easily accessible forecast databases for its area of
responsibility. Nationally, NDFD technology and collaborative
efforts between offices and centers will harmonize locally-produced
databases and create a national digital forecast database
for use by both the public and private and academic sectors.
The new process will enable us to adapt more quickly to
new and changing user needs and will create many opportunities
for partnering between the NWS and the private sector. Users
of our data and forecasts will always get the most current
information, rather than information that may be hours old.
In addition to changing our forecast process, I'd like
for 2003 to be the year that we give equal weight to both
parts of our mission: forecasts (be they weather, water
or climate) and warnings and data (observations). NWS data
forms the foundation for all weather forecasts in the United
States and we rely on our partners to help us deliver that
data and information to the public. However, we cannot count
on the American public to always get its weather forecasts
directly from us. This is why it is paramount that we provide
our customers good, consistent data. In the technology-driven
world, NWS data are as important as our life-saving warnings.
I realize change is hard, but we must not remain tied to
the past. Science and technology give us the capability
to provide better and more useful and consistent information,
and do it in varied formats. We have accomplished much over
the course of our long history and I am counting on you
to again seize the initiative and move us forward.
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Web-Based
River Forecast System Training Lesson Benefits Forecasters,
International Community
The newest addition
to the NWS Training Center (NWSTC) web site is the web-based
lesson "Introduction to the NWS River Forecast System (NWSRFS)."
The Training Center developed the presentation with support
from NWS International Activities. The lesson provides an
overview of the NWSRFS for international use, and provides
a background for NWS forecasters on how to use this hydrological
tool. The presentation can be found at: http://www.nwstc.noaa.gov/HYDRO/RFS/NWSRFS.html.
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Hurricane
Video Earns National Award
A recently released
NOAA/NWS video production, "Hurricanes: Prepare for Nature's
Fury" has earned a CINE
Golden Eagle Award. CINE is an annual national film/video
competition. "The 24-minute video is geared for all audiences
and can be used as part of educational presentations or as
a stand alone resource" said Scott Kiser, NOAA Hurricane Program
Manager, NWS Office of Climate, Water, and Weather Services.
"It should help us raise awareness of the various hazards
associated with hurricanes and the need for timely storm preparation."
The video explains how tropical cyclones form and behave and
how the NWS classifies them. Featuring accounts of memorable
storms, the various hazards associated with hurricanes are
illustrated, including: high winds, storm surge, tornadoes,
and inland flooding. The video also includes step-by-step
tips to help people be prepared for hurricanes and lists web
resources for more detailed information.
"This is a prestigious award and we can all be proud to
have won," said Bob Schwartz of the NOAA Video Studio. Kiser
and Schwartz produced the video with support from many people
representing the Tropical Prediction Center, Hurricane Research
Division of NOAA Research, the National Environmental Satellite,
Data, and Information Service, and NASA.
The CINE Golden Eagle Film and Video Competitions, held
each spring and fall, involve hundreds of volunteer media
and content specialists who judge entries in several moving-image
genres. The CINE Golden Eagle acknowledges high-quality
professional production in a variety of content categories.
Kiser said copies of the video were sent to every NOAA
line office, all NWS weather forecast offices, river forecast
centers, center weather service units, and weather service
offices, and some Federal Emergency Management Agency offices.
Additional copies are available for the cost of reproduction
from Video Transfer, Inc., 301-881-0270.
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Catch-up
Law Increases Thrift Savings Contribution Limits for Federal
Workers Over 50
In 2003, federal
workers aged 50 or over will be able to contribute more money
to their Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) accounts to help build
a larger savings during their remaining federal careers. TSP
is expected to set a date for implementing this program in
the near future.
Public Law 107-304, signed by President Bush November
27, 2002, allows workers over age 50 to make contributions
of up to $2,000 beyond existing maximum allowable TSP contribution
limits in 2003. The law covers employees in the old Civil
Service Retirement System (CSRS) and the Federal Employees’
Retirement System (FERS).
The TSP has the role
of establishing when the new provisions of this law can
be implemented. Details on when and how eligible employees
can begin making the additional TSP contributions are not
available yet, but according to an item
on the TSP website, TSP plans to implement the catch-up
program in mid-2003. TSP says the new contribution program
"will be implemented via payroll deductions and will require
employing agencies to make some changes in their personnel
and payroll systems before it can go into effect."
Once the process is established by TSP, employees over
50 will be able to gradually increase the catch-up amounts
in succeeding years. In 2003, employees age 50 or over may
contribute as much as $2,000 more per year to their TSP
accounts. In 2004, the catch-up limit increases to $3,000
more per year, then $4,000 in 2005, and $5,000 in 2006 and
beyond.
The final version of the public law is not yet available
on the web, but the House and Senate bills are online at
http://thomas.loc.gov/ by searching for H.R.
3340.
Watch NOAA's NWS Focus for updates on this issue.
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Tornado
Safety Message Taught in Video Teleconference
On December 5, 2002, forecaster Brian Montgomery of the
NWS Detroit/Pontiac Weather Forecast Office (WFO), discussed
severe weather and tornadoes in an interactive video teleconference
with more than 500 Michigan students and teachers.
Montgomery worked with Jim Wenzloff of the Macomb County
Intermediate School District (ISD) to set up the video teleconference
with several schools throughout Macomb County. The students
were expected to read the book “Night of the Twisters”
before the teleconference. Then Montgomery and Wenzloff
conducted four video teleconferencing sessions to discuss
severe weather and tornado safety and related subjects from
the book.
“The response from the students, teachers and Macomb
County ISD has been extremely positive,” said WFO
Detroit/Pontiac Warning Coordination Meteorologist Rich
Pollman. Montgomery plans to host another program with the
Macomb County ISD in March.
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Also On
the Web...2003 Federal Pay Tables Available
The Office of Personnel
Management has published the 2003
Federal salary and locality pay tables on the OPM website.
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Employee
Milestones
- Click here to
see NEW APPOINTMENTS/TRANSFERS to NWS through December
31, 2002.
- Click here to see
RETIREMENTS/DEPARTURES from NWS through December 31, 2002.
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Send
questions and comments to NWS.Communications.Office@noaa.gov or
mail to:
National Weather
Service
Communications Office
ATTN: W/COM
1325 East West Highway
Silver Spring, MD 20910-3283
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