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NOAA's NWS Focus
January
27,
2003
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Hawaii Rep. Neil Abercrombie
(left) and Edward Young, Jr., Chief of Technical
Services for NWS Pacific Region, were among
the speakers at the 14th Annual Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr., Holiday Program held in Honolulu
on January 17, 2003, to recognize the life and
achievements of Dr. King.
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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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| Director's
Dialog:
Directives
Archive
Gen. Kelly,
The new directives system provides a unique opportunity
for the NWS to make updated instructions available to the
field via the Internet. The opportunity for quick updates
and the widest distribution of these documents provides
us in the NWS field offices a ready reference to the most
current instructions available. Unfortunately for us in
the field, as documents are updated the only "revision"
information we are seeing is that they replace a previous
NDSI. Take the case of 10-813 updated this week. The only
"revision" information available in the document
states it replaces the September 12, 2002, version.
There is not a previous version available to cross reference
it with to look for changes and even if there were it would
be a poor use of time to have every office in the country
assigning a reviewer to find out what changed. Could NDS
revision information please be more specific? Another area
that could save time and effort for field offices is the
manner in which regional supplements are posted to the page.
Recently Western Region issued a number of supplements to
the Hydrology NDSIs but there is no indication on the page
which region the supplement is valid for. Is there a way
the page might show for which region the supplements provide
direction?
Respectfully,
Mike Heathfield, WCM, WFO Grand Rapids, MI
Thanks for your
suggestions.
We recently
clarified in the NDS web site tool kit that drafters can
use the Summary of Revisions section of their directives
to point out significant changes. This will be spelled out
in the next version of NWS Instruction 1-101 on the NWS
Directives System - Structure and Management, which is due
to be updated in August 2003.
We also created
an archival site for superseded and rescinded directives.
Readers can go to the Directives
System web site and click "NDS/WSOM X-Ref"
to find the NDS Archives.
Regional office
identifiers now preface the title of supplements posted
on the web site.
Jack
Kelly, NWS Director
Have a question for the Director? Follow
this link for guidelines for submitting a Director's
Dialog question.
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Alaska
Aviation Weather Unit On Alert for Possible Volcanic Eruption
The Anchorage Volcanic Ash Advisory Center (VAAC), part
of the NWS's Alaska Aviation Weather Unit (AAWU), is preparing
for an eruption. The Mt. Veniaminof Volcano, located on
the Alaska Peninsula 480 miles southwest of Anchorage, AK,
and one of Alaska's most active volcanoes, is exhibiting
elevated seismic activity. The level of activity has been
slowly increasing and has been nearly constant during the
past week.
Mt. Veniaminof
last erupted from 1993 to 1995. Historically, eruptions
have produced ash clouds to 20,000 feet. North Pacific air
routes, which carry 10,000 people per day, and up to 50,000
aircraft per year, could be impacted should an eruption
occur. The Center is running in-house models twice a day
to predict where the clouds of volcanic ash would travel
in the event of an eruption.
"Volcanic
ash clouds can cause jet engines to stall. You want your
pilot to know ASAP about volcanic eruptions and ash clouds
ahead of your aircraft," said Elliott Barske, Meteorologist-In-Charge
of the AAWU.
VAACs are responsible
for providing volcanic ash movement and dispersion guidance
to air traffic control centers neighboring VAACs. Only two
VAACs cover the United States: the Alaska Aviation Weather
Unit in Anchorage, and the NOAA/NESDIS Satellite Analysis
Branch in Washington, DC. There are seven other VAACs worldwide.
Although the
area of the Anchorage Volcanic Ash Advisory Center is one
of the smallest VAAC areas, it covers air routes over some
of the most active volcanic areas in the world. Alaska has
80 percent of all active U.S. volcanoes, and 8 percent of
the active volcanoes world-wide. Alaska contains over 100
volcanoes and over 40 of these have been active in historic
time.
The U.S. Geological
Survey's Alaska Volcano Observatory currently has the Mt.
Veniaminof volcano at level of concern color code Yellow.
The four level color code runs from Green (quiet) to Yellow
to Orange to Red (significant eruption occurring or imminent).
Click here to
visit the Anchorage
VAAC home page. Also take a look at general information
on Mt. Veniaminof from the NOAA/NESDIS
National Geophysical Data Center's Teachers Guide to Volcanoes
of the World.
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Marine
Prediction Center's Name Changes
On January 12,
2003, the Marine Prediction Center became the Ocean Prediction
Center (OPC). "The
new name accurately captures the increasingly important
role ocean activities play in the operations of NCEP, the
NationalWeather Service, and NOAA," said Dave Feit,
OPC Director of Operations.
The Center,
located at National Centers for Environmental Prediction
Headquarters in Camp Springs, MD, issues marine warnings
and forecasts and monitors maritime data for the protection
of life and property, safety at sea, and enhancement of
economic opportunity.
The Center's
two branches are now the Ocean Forecast Branch (formerly
the Marine Forecast Branch), and the Ocean Applications
Branch (formerly the Marine Applications Branch).
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Forecaster
and Retiree Creating Outreach Solution
As the saying goes, necessity is the mother of invention.
Former Warning Coordination Meteorologist (WCM) at the Weather
Forecast Office (WFO) in Lincoln, IL, Rod Palmer, who worked
more than 44 years before he retired, found it frustrating
that he could not visit every school in his area of responsibility
to discuss weather preparedness. There just weren't enough
resources to make that possible. Enter Ed Holicky, journeyman
forecaster at WFO Lincoln. Holicky came up with the idea
to create an interactive weather preparedness CD-ROM for
use at middle schools in Illinois, so now the pair are partnering
to make the idea a reality.
They have united
people from many fields to produce the safety and preparedness
curriculum and interactive CD-ROM. Primary partners include
the Illinois Education Association (IEA) of the National
Education Association (NEA), the Illinois Emergency Management
Association, and the National Weather Service. Other stakeholders
include the media, the Cooperative Program for Operational
Meteorology, Education and Training, staff at WFO Lincoln,
TV stations, the American Red Cross, storm media companies,
and individual storm chasers, to name a few.
The CD-ROM program
now in production and called "Xtreme Weather,"
will contain seven sections, focusing on thunderstorms,
tornados, flash floods, hurricanes, heat, winter weather,
and a general section on meteorology. "The goal was
to create something fun and unique, keeping in mind both
teachers and students. Students of today are the adults
of tomorrow. What better way of preparing them to understand
the risks associated with severe weather," said Holicky
The IEA and
the NEA provided initial funding for the project. "Educators
assured that our program met state standards. We were responsible
for content oversight and integrity. They allowed us to
create our own program and to promote NOAA/NWS and key programs
such as NOAA Weather Radio," said Holicky.
Holicky says
that the final version of the CD-ROM should be available
to an estimated 2,000 Illinois middle schools by August
2003. Illinois was No. 2 in weather-related deaths in 2001.
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NWS Golf
Outing Planned
The Central
Region/NWS Golf Association will host its 18th annual golf
outing the week
of June 16-20, 2003, at Loma Linda Golf Resort near Joplin,
MO. The event is open to all NWS golfers nationwide, active
and retired, and to their spouses and guests. For more
information, visit the following link http://www.weatherconsultant.com/Golf/Golf.html,
or
contact Brian Hahn, NWS Milwaukee/Sullivan, WI, at brian.hahn@noaa.gov.
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Chief Information
Officer is New President of Information Processing Group
Barry West,
NWS Chief Information Officer, takes over as president of
the Federation of Government Information Processing Councils
on February 1, 2003. The not-for-profit FGIPC is a corporation
which facilitates and encourages professional communication
between organizations of the government information technology
(IT) community, between those organizations and industry,
and between those organizations and central management agencies
in Washington, DC.
West states,
"I look forward to my new role as President and in
representing the United States government Information Technology
community yearly at the International Council for Information
Technology in Government Administration (ICA) event. This
assignment provides a great opportunity to work closely
in sharing best practices and lessons learned with other
government agencies and private industry."
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Also On the Web...FAA Deploys New Weather Technology at Air Traffic Facilities
The Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA) announced it has deployed
"advanced weather processing systems" to make
NEXRAD data available to controllers at all 20 air route
traffic control facilities. In a January
23 news release, the FAA said the Weather and Radar
Processor - called WARP - allows air traffic controllers
to see more accurate, timely weather information on the
same display that shows aircraft position data. The system
uses NEXRAD data.
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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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