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NOAA's NWS Focus -
June 19,
2002
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Click
here to take
a look at other NWS news, as submitted in the June
13, 2002, NWS input to 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 Access
NOAA
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2002 Shaping Up As Record-Breaking
Year for Wildfire Support
Incident Meteorologists (IMETs) from the NWS have been
deployed to provide fire
weather forecast services to land management agencies
at 33 separate wildland fires so far this year, making 2002
the second busiest for IMET dispatches by this calendar
date. The NWS provides three levels of fire weather support:
1) one- and two-day fire outlooks are distributed by the
Storm Prediction Center; 2) Weather Forecast Offices issue
red flag warnings and related forecast products; and 3)
IMETs are dispatched to the fire. IMETs are NWS forecasters
who receive special training in microscale
forecasting, fire behavior, and fire operations, which makes
them a key member of fire management teams.
Between 1993 and 2002, an average of 19 NWS IMETs per year were
dispatched to fires. As of June 18, 2002, NWS has already dispatched
42 IMETs in 2002.
Colorado is experiencing its worst fire season ever, keeping
IMETs and Colorado WFOs occupied with more than 140,000
acres burned in the state as of last week. The burnt acreage
total is more than double the previous full-year total for
acreage burned in the state. As of June 10, 2002, more than
33,000 wildland fires have charred more than 1.3 million
acres across the Nation this year.
"NOAA's weather forecast support for fire management agencies
continues to be a top priority in Colorado," according to
NOAA Administrator Vice Admiral Conrad C. Lautenbacher, Jr., in
a recent note to employees. "President Bush recently assured
Governor Owens that the Federal Government would do everything
it could to help fight these fires and I thank NOAA for helping
this Administration keep that promise."
For a description of the vital roles NWS plays in forecasting
and supporting efforts to control wildfires, see the NOAA
Public Affairs web site.
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Cooperative Observer Killed in Shooting Incident
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Brother Damian Larson, longtime Coop
Observer at Conception Abbey in Northwest Missouri,
was killed by a gunman on June 10, 2002. A 71-year-old man
walked into Conception Abbey with an assault rifle and murdered
Brother Larson and Reverend Philip Schuster and wounded
two other Monks before killing himself.
Larson, 64, was from Wichita, KS, and worked as a groundskeeper
at the abbey, about 30 miles north of St. Joseph, MO. He
was known in Missouri as the "Weather
Monk." His weather cartoons appeared in several
small northwest Missouri newspapers.
"Brother Larson continued the tradition of fine Coop
Observers at Conception Abbey and served as a Coop Observer
since 1969," said Bob Bonack of Central Region Headquarters.
The Coop Station at the abbey is one of the oldest in the
Central Region with records dating back to 1883. Conception
Abbey was founded in 1873 by two Benedictine monks from
the ancient Engelberg Abbey in Switzerland.
One of Larson's predecessors, Father Adelhelm Hess, served
as an Observer from 1894 until 1964 and was honored with
the Jefferson Award in 1963.
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"Green
Is Where It's At!" Department of Energy Applauds NWS
Architect's Work
"Visionary"Architect John Porter has been honored
by the U.S.
Department of Energy's Federal Energy Management Program.
Porter has been Team Leader for the design and construction
of many NWS forecast offices. His environmentally friendly
"green" designs may help reduce facility energy
costs by 33 percent. He joins twelve other Department
of Commerce employees recognized through this program.
Porter's most recent design, for the new Weather Forecast
Office (WFO) in Caribou, ME, incorporates all of the lessons
learned from previous office construction. The NWS dedicates
the Caribou office on July 2, 2002.
"The Caribou Office is the most advanced facility
we have in terms of design, building materials, energy efficiency,
equipment, safety, security, and lightning protection,"
said NWS Deputy Director John E. Jones, Jr.
"Green is where it's at!" said Porter, who advocates
functional design that is environmentally responsible. Energy
efficient measures taken in the construction of the Caribou
office include:
Half of all the building's materials contain recycled
content, and half of all wood based materials are "certified
wood" -- grown and harvested in accordance with established
sustainability procedures and guidelines for environmental
stewardship.
The Caribou building has been oriented to harvest
the sun for its year-round light and its heat in the winter,
and natural day lighting is the primary source of daytime
lighting in most areas of the building thereby nearly eliminating
the need to turn on overhead lights during the day.
The heating and cooling of the building uses a well,
nearly 1000 feet deep, to take advantage of the earth's
stable temperature. This geo-thermal feature eliminates
the need for refrigerants which can damage the atmosphere.
The windows are operable to take advantage of Caribou's
cool weather and enable the air conditioning to be turned
downor off altogether.
The Caribou WFO is one of only a handful in the country
to be recognized as a high performance building by the United
States Green Building Council's Leadership
in Energy and Environmental Design program.
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NWS
Partners with Sea Grant Program to Reduce Rip Current Deaths
NWS has joined forces with the North Carolina Sea Grant
Program to launch a rip current public awareness campaign
with local beach communities in North Carolina (NC). More
than 500 permanent rip current awareness signs have been
erected along NC beach parking lots, access sites, crossovers,
and lifeguard stands to illustrate a rip current and what
swimmers need to know if caught in one. The signs tell swimmers,
"Don't panic. Swim parallel to shore to swim out of
the turbulent surf."
"Nationally, about 100 fatalities are caused by rip
currents each year. This coordinated effort between the
NC Sea Grant Program and the NWS provides the public with
timely life-saving information," according to Steven
Pfaff, Senior Forecaster at the Wilmington Weather Forecast
Office. To further protect lives, the NWS offers online
rip current forecasts during the beach season along most
U.S. coastal regions. More information is available on a
NOAA web site focusing on rip currents at http://www.ripcurrents.noaa.gov/.
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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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