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NOAA's NWS Focus
March
3, 2003 |
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NWS Deputy Director
John Jones, Mayor John Bell of Gloucester,
MA, and NWS Eastern Region Headquarters Director
Dean Gulezian joined to
dedicate a NOAA Weather Radio transmitter recently.
About 30 or 40 people, including Timothy Keeney, Deputy
Assistant Secretary for Oceans and Atmosphere at NOAA, turned out to
dedicate the new transmitter despite an earlier storm that dumped two
feet of snow on the Gloucester area. The new NOAA Weather Radio station
provides a live 24-hour broadcast of marine forecasts and warnings
directly from the NOAA Weather Service Boston forecast office in
Taunton. Read
more 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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NOAA, NWS
Budgets Set for Fiscal Year 2003; 4.1 Percent Pay Raise
Included
NOAA received
its FY 03 budget when President Bush signed the FY 03
Ominbus Appropriation Bill into law Feburary
20, 2003.
The appropriation
provides $3.1 billion for NOAA, and $754.6 million for the
NWS, a reduction of $17.8 million from the FY 03 President's
Budget proposal, and an increase of $11.5 million from the
FY 2002 Appropriation.
"Although the
NWS did fairly well compared to many Federal agencies, the
appropriation will provide some challenges for the NWS and
will require some overall reductions in our base budgets,"
said Steve Gallagher, Director of Budget Planning for the
NWS. "Like all other agencies covered in the FY 03 spending
bill, the NWS was hit by an across-the-board reduction of
.65 percent to help fund other high priority Congressional
programs and meet the spending targets."
On the positive
side, the NWS got funding for new service initiatives,
including
aviation weather, Advanced Hydrologic Prediction Service,
Cooperative Observer Program modernization, and radiosonde
replacement. Some challenges for NWS include a lack of
funding
for Weather Forecast Office (WFO) construction and a reduction
in funding for WFO maintenance and systems maintenance.
Some highlights
of the FY 03 NWS budget:
- The new
budget provides a pay raise of 4.1 percent for Federal
employees.
The NWS budget contains $18.1 million to cover inflation
costs, versus the NWS request of $23.8 million to cover
inflation
costs. The raise will be retroactive
to the first pay period of 2003.
- Tsunami
Hazard Mitigation - Denied the NWS request of $2.3
million and
provided $4.3 million to NOAA
Research for this activity.
- Aviation
Weather - Provides full funding of $2.5 million for
the
start of a seven-year program to improve aviation weather
warnings and forecasts.
- Advanced
Hydrologic Prediction Service (AHPS) - Provides full
funding
of $6.1 million to implement AHPS at new locations in
the Northeast, Southeast, Mid-Atlantic, and Midwest.
- Alaska Data
Buoys - Provides full funding of $1.7 million to continue
deployment and fund operations and maintenance cost for
new buoys off Alaska.
- NOAA Weather
Radio Operations and Maintenance - Provides $1.1 million,
a reduction of $1.1 million from the request.
- WFO
Maintenance - Provides $5 million for the
WFO maintenance account, a decrease of $2.5 million from
the NWS request.
- COOP Network
- Provides an earmark of $3 million to modernize 200 COOP
stations and deploy high resolution models at eight sites
in New England. Provides full funding $1.9 million to
repair some existing stations.
- Air Quality
- Provides an earmark of $3 million for NWS to begin
issuing
an operational air quality forecast in FY 04.
- Radiosonde
Replacement Program - Provides full funding of $6.9
million
for radiosonde replacement.
- Next Generation
Radar (NEXRAD), Automated Surface Observing System (ASOS),
and Advanced Weather Interactive Processing System (AWIPS)
Technology Infusion - Provides full funding for all three
systems' technology infusion programs, including $8.2
million for NEXRAD, $16.2 million for AWIPS, and $5.1
million for ASOS.
- Weather
and Climate Supercomputing - Provides full funding
for the
operational supercomputer at $21 million, an increase
of $6 million over FY 02.
- Weather and
Climate Supercomputer Backup - Denied the request of $7.2
million for a backup supercomputer initiative.
- WFO Construction
- Denied the entire WFO construction request of $10.6
million, delaying construction of the new WFO Key West,
FL,
weather office repairs in Alaska, and $3.5 million for
recurring leases for WFOs. The mark denied a number
of
NOAA facilities requests stating the need for an overall
NOAA facilities and maintenance plan.
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Spaceflight
Meteorology Group Supports Space Shuttle Investigation
The NWS Spaceflight
Meteorology Group (SMG) is working with other NWS staffs
and other agencies providing expert assistance to the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) following the
tragic break up of the Space Shuttle Columbia on February
1, 2003.
SMG is providing
a range of services, from examining weather radar
data
to reconstructing the atmospheric conditions encountered
by the shuttle as it made reentry. SMG is coordinating
meteorological
reconstruction efforts with several groups, including NASA's
Kennedy Space Center weather office and Marshall Space
Flight Center Environments Group and the U.S. Air
Force 45th Weather Squadron. SMG has received
significant
and timely help in acquiring data from NWS Southern Region
Headquarters, NWS Weather Forecast Offices in Shreveport,
LA, Fort Worth, TX, and Lake Charles, LA. NWS's Radar
Operations Center, NOAA's National Severe Storms Lab,
NOAA's Forecast Systems Lab, NOAA's National Climatic Data
Center, and NOAA's National Environmental Satellite,
Data, and Information Service also assisted.
Read
more here.
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NOAA-Funded
Shows in Production for Spring Broadcast on The Weather
Channel
NOAA is underwriting
a series of shows for broadcast on The Weather Channel starting
in the spring. GRB Entertainment is producing the shows,
collectively
called Forecast Earth.
"This is a
great opportunity for us to create network quality television
programs that detail some of the many compelling NOAA stories,"
said Curtis Carey, NOAA's NWS Public Affairs Chief. "These
Weather Channel productions give us a great opportunity
to educate viewers about the functions of NOAA and the
NWS, and give people insight into how we gather data and
produce
forecasts, watches, and warnings. NOAA and NWS will have
all non-broadcast rights to the production so copies will
be available for staffs to use in outreach and public education
efforts."
The Forecast
Earth series includes a 30-minute special about
NWS forecasts and warnings and their impact on America;
a series of
five short El Niņo stories; a 30-minute special on NOAA's
Coastal Storms initiative; and a 30-minute special on
the
National Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellites
System (NPOESS).
According to
Carey, the NWS special explores how the agency tracks and
forecasts the turbulent, and ever-changing atmosphere with
a high-tech array of satellites, radars, supercomputers,
and a pinch of artistry from the professionals working in
NWS offices across the country.
"We want viewers
to feel a strong connection between the NWS and their daily
lives. This program will give them a front row seat on how
the NWS is a highly ethical science agency designed to protect
and promote the well-being of individuals and the national
economy," said Carey.
A production
crew filmed some interviews with scientists attending the
recent American Meteorological Society annual meeting in
Long Beach, CA, in February. Other offices will be called
in the coming weeks for more interviews.
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Section
508 Working Group Provides Compliance Resources
NOAA's Section
508 Accessibility Working Group is providing help for employees
working to ensure electronic and information technologies
are accessible to people with disabilities.
In 1998, Congress
amended
the Rehabilitation Act. Section 508 was enacted to ensure
that the information technology that we buy or develop provides
people with disabilities with access to information and
data comparable to that of employees and members of the
public without disabilities.
With the explosion
of graphical forecast products on the Internet, a major
challenge for the NWS is making these products
accessible to all.
"We're moving
a lot of complex information," said Carl Staton, NOAA
Chief Information Officer. "Our challenge is to make
it available to whoever needs it, whenever they need
it, and however
they need to access it. NOAA has gotten off to a good start
with 508 compliance, but there's still a lot more
we can
do."
NOAA hosts
a number of web sites with Section 508 information and
resources including the following:
- NOAA's
Section 508 site has overviews of policies and guidelines,
explanations of how 508 will affect specific roles within
NOAA, and resources and tools to help employees become
aware of, and compliant with, the new standards.
- NWS's
Office of the Chief Information Officer hosts a site
which features links on disability, accessibility, and
Section 508 compliance issues. This information is made
available to assist managers, purchasing agents, and web/software
developers to provide accessibility and to meet the Section
508 standards.
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Local Staffers
Earn Office Honors
The Cheyenne,
WY, Weather Forecast Office (WFO) recently honored three
staff members. Awardees
were selected by a management and bargaining unit team.
Ray Gomez earned
the Operational Excellence in Meteorology Award for his
excellent work with the Interactive Forecast Preparation
System (IFPS) and National Digital Forecast Database (NDFD).
Gomez, the office's Service Hydrologist, is the IFPS/NDFD
focal point for the office.
Jennifer Stark
earned the office's Most Valuable Player Award for the
second time.
She was recognized for the outstanding support she gave
during critical weather events last year, and for being
an excellent team player.
Additionally,
Don Turner, Regional Maintenance
Specialist, earned a Special Act Award from the Hastings,
NE, WFO for his work installing five NOAA Weather Radio
transmitters
in the
Hastings
County warning area in the past year.
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NWS Keeps
in e-Contact with Key Customers and Partners
The NWS has implemented
an electronic service that allows customers and partners to
be a simple e-mail away from NWS subject matter experts.
Based on Internet
list-server technology, e-mail lists have been created for
emergency managers, private sector meteorologists, and broadcast
meteorologists.
"We've had
the list servers available to us for a long time, but up
until now we've used them almost exclusively for internal
communications," said Greg Mandt, Director of the Office
of Climate, Water, and Weather Services. "They're a perfect
tool for workgroup communications. But we think they can
also be used to help us make improvements in customer service
too. List servers are a good way to answer customer and
partner questions in a timely but also unobtrusive manner."
A recent post
by an NWS staff officer to the emergency manager list-server
elicited 13 replies within 8 hours of its posting. As of
December 31, 2002, 131 emergency managers, 21 broadcast
meteorologists, and 11 private sector meteorologists have
subscribed to the service.
Customers and
partners can join one of the list services by visiting http://infolist.nws.noaa.gov/scripts/lyris.pl
and choosing "National WCM Lists."
To learn more
about NWS list servers, check out a previous NOAA's NWS Focus story.
To create a new list, contact Fran Curnow at Frances.Curnow@noaa.gov
with your work-related topic idea.
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Also On
The Web...NOAA Sponsors Women's History Training Conference
NOAA is sponsoring
a training conference to commemorate Women's History Month
with the theme, "Women Pioneering the Future." The training
will cover topics such as developing communication and networking
skills, mentoring, team building, professional/leadership
development, and services offered by NOAA.
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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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