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NOAA's NWS Focus
February
24 , 2003 |
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(Left to Right) Actor George
Darrell and NWS meteorologist Jack Messick of the Weather Forecast Office in Pocatello,
ID, show off their costumes while filming a
movie in Maryland during September 2001. Read
more about it by clicking here
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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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NWS Director
Highlights What's Ahead for NWS at AMS Annual Meeting
The National Digital
Forecast Database and the NWS Climate Program were among
the
topics covered by NWS Director Jack Kelly when he recently
spoke to the membership of the American Meteorological Society
(AMS). Kelly addressed the Interactive Information and Processing
Systems (IIPS) conference during the 83rd Annual Meeting
of
the AMS in Long Beach, CA, on February 10, 2003.
Addressing
the coming year's efforts, Kelly described plans for
the NWS Climate Program. The Climate Prediction Center's
(CPC's) product suite will be expanded to include an
excessive cold
product to compliment the excessive heat product. Climate
Services Programs will be operational in all NWS regions
by the end of FY 2003.
Kelly also
told the audience that starting later this year the National
Digital Forecast Database (NDFD) will become operational
and provide a seamless mosaic of NWS digital forecasts from
NWS field offices working in collaboration with the National
Centers for Environmental Prediction. The database will
be made available to all customers and partners - public
and private - and will allow those customers and partners
to create a wide range of text, graphic, and image products
of their own.
NWS's AMS exhibit
booth mirrored Kelly's remarks, showcasing some of the planned
changes to the way NWS does business. Visitors to the NWS
exhibit saw a demonstration of the NDFD, new fire weather
forecasting technologies, NOAA Weather Radio, plans for
the Advanced Hydrologic Prediction Service, and climate
products issued by the CPC.
Looking back
at the agency's 2002 accomplishments, Kelly highlighted
the agency's actions associated with the Van
Wert, OH, tornado episode, which occurred November 10,
2002, as a success for the entire weather community.
"It represented
success at every level," he said, "including data acquisition
and processing, numerical modeling, warning operations,
and dissemination." He also noted the vital role played
by those in research, academia, the media, and emergency
management. "Users responded to our warnings and, by doing
so, saved lives," said Kelly.
Click here
for a link to a copy of Director
Kelly's IIPS presentation.
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NWS Employees
Honored During AMS
Several NWS employees
earned honors
during the American Meteorological Society's (AMS's) annual
meeting in Long Beach, CA, on February 9-13, 2003.
NWS employees
William Proenza, NWS Southern Region Director, and Robert
E. Saffle, NEXRAD expert with the NWS Office of Science
and Technology, were named AMS Fellows. The honor of
AMS
Fellow recognizes individuals for outstanding contributions
to the atmospheric or related oceanic or hydrologic
sciences,
or their applications, during a substantial period of years.
Only two-tenths of one percent of membership are approved
as Fellows each year.
Joseph T. Schaefer,
Director, NWS Storm Prediction Center earned the Francis
W. Reichelderfer Award. Schaefer was honored for his "enduring
contributions to the improvement of severe weather forecasts
and especially their dissemination and verification." The
Reichelderfer Award is presented for distinguished public
service contributions by personnel of the weather services.
The award is named for the former Director of the U.S. Weather
Bureau from 1938 to 1963.
Robert S. Davis,
senior forecaster WFO Pittsburgh, PA, earned the Charles
L. Mitchell Award. Davis was honored for "20 years of exceptional
service and commitment toward the improvement of flash flood
forecasting." The Mitchell Award is presented for lifetime
achievement in operational weather forecasting and weather
research. The award is named in honor of Charles L. Mitchell,
who was recognized by the Society in 1967 "for his record
of outstanding public service during the first half of the
20th century."
Raymond H.
Brady, Michael L. Jurewicz, and David Morford, all forecasters
at WFO Binghamton, NY, and Jeff. S. Waldstreicher, Deputy
Chief of the Scientific Services Division, NWS Eastern
Region
Headquarters, Bohemia, NY, each earned the Award
for Exceptional Specific Prediction. The meteorologists
were all on duty during a severe weather outbreak that
ranks
among the worst in central New York and northeast Pennsylvania
history in more than 50 years. During May 31 and June
2,
1998, 19 tornadoes occurred resulting in millions of dollars
in damages and two fatalities. The four forecasters made
critical decisions that resulted in extremely timely severe
weather and tornado warnings that saved many lives. The
team also made extraordinary efforts to coordinate with
emergency managers and utility managers, two groups that
are highly impacted by severe weather.
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Survey
Feedback Action Process Helps Manager Refocus, Turn Around
Office Performance
Tom Kriehn recognized
things needed to change at the Newport/Morehead City, NC,
Weather Forecast Office (WFO). As Meteorologist-In-Charge,
he was faced with sobering results from the 1998 NOAA Survey
Feedback Action (SFA) process. His "workgroup" (the WFO)
scored below the NWS average on every one of six key dimensions -
leadership, innovation, employee involvement, communications,
fairness, and teamwork.
After studying
results of the survey, Kriehn took steps to understand the
SFA scores and improve his leadership abilities and the
office's performance. The results? Four years after the
first SFA, the 2002 SFA scores for WFO Newport/Morehead
City were all above the NWS average for the same six dimensions
covered in the employee survey.
Kriehn acknowledges
that advances in the science of meteorology have contributed
to his office's performance improvement over the past few
years, but he says embracing the principles of diversity
and a change in thinking and attitude among the staff has
played a major role in the office's performance turnaround.
Kriehn holds
frequent staff meetings and he and his staff communicate
frequently with all levels of the NWS. Kriehn's management
staff also involves employees in planning. The staff and
management developed an integrated workforce plan to include
Hydrometeorological Technician's (HMTs) in the forecast
process, and in the absence of an HMT, have meteorologists
perform data acquisition duties. At a special once-a-year
staff meeting, the staff works together to draw up the operating
plan for the upcoming year. Most importantly, Kriehn and
his staff changed the office standard from "being good followers"
to "being regional leaders."
Kriehn said
he openly encourages innovation and risk-taking, and the
staff embraces change as an opportunity to do things a better
way. Station meetings include training on leadership skills.
He encourages the staff to fix any problems they can fix,
and not wait for NWS Headquarters to fix their problems
for them. At staff meetings the office celebrates successes
and discusses leadership topics. Kriehn said he encourages
the staff to, as ex-General Electric CEO Jack Welch said,
"Be number one or two at everything we do."
Kriehn said
his staff responded almost immediately to the shift
toward
being regional leaders. The staff created a local
hazards web page and developed the graphical Regional
Digital Forecast (RDF) product, which is a simple graphical
version of the RDF that uses easily deciphered icons to
depict the highly-detailed
digital forecast product matrix.
The Morehead
City office was one of the first offices in the Eastern
Region to begin posting graphical forecasts to the Internet.
The staff created a graphical version of the hurricane
local
statement and posted it on a secure local web server on
station. The page provides one-stop shopping for emergency
managers
seeking critical forecast information about hurricanes
such as storm surge graphics, watch/warning status,
flooding
potential, and other information needed for briefing county
officials. Since the web site is hosted by a server
on station
and is password protected, emergency managers are insured
quick access at times when other web pages are difficult
to access due to high volume. The office was one of the
first in the Eastern Region to begin issuing forecasts
for
rip currents.
The staff also
embraced diversity principles, especially in the hiring
process, where the entire management team is included in
the process.
"We hired a
number of new people since the 1998 SFA survey," said Kriehn.
"The local management team has varied backgrounds and bring
many perspectives to the table. In the end, our selections
have improved based on the inclusive atmosphere."
John Elardo,
Senior Forecaster who has worked at the Morehead City office
for the past nine years said he has noticed the change in
the office attitude.
"The confidence
we gained from solving problems ourselves rather than waiting
for a top-down solution unleashed lots of creative energy
in our office," Elardo said. "Our early successes fostered
a strong team spirit, which enabled us to overcome cultural
and other impediments to change."
The change
has been noticed at the regional headquarters level too.
"Tom has embraced
the leadership principles we advocate in Eastern Region,"
said Eastern Region Headquarters Director Dean Gulezian.
"His office's performance is a reflection of his improved
leadership skills."
After Gulezian
became NWS Eastern Region Headquarters Director in 2000,
he emphasized leadership training for Eastern Region MICs,
HICs, and Division Chiefs. Kriehn attended the Army-sponsored
Professional Management for Executives course (PME) in 2001
(now the NWS Executive Leadership Course). He attributes
most of his improvement in leadership skills to lessons
he learned at the PME course.
"If we continue
to follow the leadership paradigm by espousing the concepts
of empowerment, risk taking, and innovation, we will realize
the full potential of our staff and ensure that we fulfill
the mission of the NWS," said Kriehn.
In 2002, NWS
SFA Coordinator Steve Smith, was asked to make a business
case for the SFA process for the NWS Corporate Board. Steve
collected data on the NWS Government Performance and Results
Act (GPRA) goals, specifically, tornado Probability of Detection
(POD), False Alarm Rate (FAR), and lead times, and correlated
those results by WFO to the 2002 SFA survey results. Smith
found a positive correlation between the top ten performing
offices during 2000 and 2001 with respect to GPRA goals,
and SFA results. One of those offices in the top ten was
WFO Newport/Morehead City.
The office's
performance measures have steadily improved since 1996 and
1997. In 1996 and 1997, WFO Newport/Morehead City tornado
POD was 69 percent, FAR was 61 percent, and the average
warning lead time was 8.8 minutes. This past year, based
on eight tornado events, the office POD was 88 percent,
the FAR was 25 percent, and the average warning lead time
was 14 minutes. All are above the 2002 NWS GPRA Goals of
POD of 69 percent, FAR of 71 percent, and lead time of 11
minutes.
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Thrift
Savings Plan Catch-Up Plan Outlined in Bulletin
A recent Thrift
Savings Plan (TSP) bulletin outlines details of a new
"Catch-Up Contributions" feature which enables federal
workers aged 50 or over to contribute additional money to
their TSP accounts. According to the bulletin,
TSP will implement the program in July. The bulletin provides
many details on the program.
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NWS Forecaster
In Current Movie: Employee Sees Life as a Civil War Soldier
From Both Sides
As part of his
duties as an NWS Incident Meteorologist, Jack Messick often
travels from his home in Pocatello, ID, to provide wildfire
support to land management agencies. He is used to living
in remote locations and facing the weather elements. But for
fun, he sometimes spends additional time in remote locations,
wearing heavy, scratchy, wool uniforms.
Messick studies
the American Civil War and also enjoys Civil War reenactments.
He travels to battle reenactments across the country, usually
participating as a Union infantryman.
Messick's
hobby landed him a role in the new movie Gods and Generals,
released nationally on February 21, 2003. While the movie
focuses on the life of Confederate General "Stonewall" Jackson
and Yankee Colonel Joshua Chamberlain, it also portrays
every day soldiers and citizens who became heroes on both
sides of the war. "I went to Maryland on vacation in
September 2001 and volunteered for two weeks on the
movie set as one
of hundreds of 'background artists." Instead of paying
me for my work, the studio contributed a portion of its
budget towards preservation of land that has historical
value," said Messick.
"Usually I
play the role as a Federal Army private at Civil War re-enactments,"
said Messick. "For Gods and Generals, the director needed
everyone in the same uniform to recreate the charges and
retreats on a grand scale. So, the wardrobe department outfitted
me with a Rebel uniform on some days, while other shooting
days I got to wear my Yankee blues. Through movie magic
I may actually chase myself across the big screen."
Although Messick
did not play the part of a weather forecaster, he is quite
aware of the decisions that were made during the Civil War
due to the weather.
"In a heavy
rain, muskets and cannons could not fire once the gunpowder
got wet. Muddy roads bogged down troop and wagon train movements,
sometimes halting it altogether. Snow also forced the armies
to stop marching for almost the entire winter. The few winter
battles during the Civil War were near disasters for the
army on the offensive. This made the war drag on. Had there
been any ability to forecast the weather 140 years ago,
it would have been an incredible advantage for either side."
Several NWS
employees in Pocatello planned to attend the opening
night
of the movie in hopes of spotting Jack Messick in either
his blue or gray uniforms. He wouldn't give away the
ending of the movie, but Messick said he does survive in
his battle scenes.
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Also On
the Web...Communicating With, To, And About People
With
Disabilities
Last month the
Federal Communicators Network sponsored a workshop on a topic
of ever-increasing importance: communicating with, to, and
about people with disabilities. The conference, titled "The
Next Communications Challenge: Integrating Disability," drew
participants from across the federal sector and beyond.
Vodium provides
a webcast of this event. To access it click on http://www.vodium.com/login/fcn.
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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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