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| NOAA's NWS Focus |
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June 23, 2003
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Forecaster David Manning
of the Sterling, VA, Weather Forecast Office
explains what a radiosonde is to students at
a recent science field day held at Grace Episcopal
Day School in Kensington, MD. Manning gave presentations
to 145 students in grades 1-5 (in groups of
20) about the weather balloon program. He brought
a radiosonde, weather balloon, and parachute
for the students to see during his hands-on
presentation. The NWS was one of 10 science
organizations (including NOAA's Marine and Ocean
Service, National Wildlife Federation, and NOAA's
Fisheries Office) attending from the Washington,
DC, area.
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NWS Hardship
Transfer Consideration Policy Serving Needs
Several employees
have participated since the NWS launched
the Hardship Transfer Consideration Program in October
2002.
Of the five applicants accepted so far, four have been
placed at their requested duty station, at NWS expense.
The fifth applicant is on the Hardship Transfer Consideration
List - a weekly list sent to all hiring officials throughout
the NWS.
The program was developed by the NWS Workforce/Human Capital
Committee to better serve the NWS workforce. The policy
identifies criteria that make an employee eligible to apply
for hardship transfer consideration. "Thus far, the program
has enjoyed great success," said Dean Gulezian, Eastern
Region Director and Committee Chair. "We are very pleased
with the number of people taking advantage of this
family-friendly
employee program."
All NWS employees meeting the necessary criteria are encouraged
to apply for hardship transfer consideration.
"Although we don't like to see our employees struggle
with difficult family situations, we are proud to offer
this program and encourage eligible employees to participate,"
said Gulezian. The Hardship Transfer Consider Policy is
online at http://www.nws.noaa.gov/directives//090/pd09004a.pdf.
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Forecast
Office Named Energy Saver Showcase Facility
The energy-efficient
Caribou, ME, Weather Forecast Office (WFO) has been designated
as a 2003 Federal Energy Saver Showcase facility by the National
Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) of the Department
of Energy's Federal Energy Management Program.
A plaque notifying visitors they are entering a government
building that uses energy and water wisely and saves taxpayer
dollars will be sent to WFO Caribou in the next two months.
The project will also be summarized in the 2003 Federal
Energy Saver Showcase booklet describing the projects completed
this year.
"Our staff is very proud of our new facility. It's an
outstanding example of teamwork by local, state, and federal
officials," said Larry Gabric, Caribou's Meteorologist-In-Charge.
"Caribou is probably viewed as the most advanced facility
in the NWS's inventory of Weather Forecast Offices. It serves
as a model in terms of design, building materials, energy
efficiency, equipment, safety, security, and lightning protection."
Designed and built by the NWS's Caribou WFO Facility
Team, Caribou has already been recognized as one of the
first
federal buildings to fully incorporate energy efficiency.
Every aspect of the building's design, construction, and
operation has been analyzed and optimized to minimize its
impact on the environment.
See an article on last year's WFO Caribou's ribbon-cutting
ceremony here.
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Working
Together to Save Lives:
19 Honored with Mark Trail Awards for Advancing NOAA Weather
Radio
Nineteen Mark Trail/NOAA
Weather Radio public service awards were presented during
a Capitol Hill luncheon on June 17, 2003, in Washington, DC.
The seventh annual Mark Trail Awards recognized individuals
and groups that made contributions to expand and improve NOAA
Weather Radio coverage, awareness, and radio receiver ownership
across the Nation. Click here to read the full
NOAA news release.
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First Tampa
Bay Day Brings Together NOAA Offices
Better regional
coordination among NOAA offices in the Tampa Bay, FL, area
began recently at a gathering of employees from NOAA components
in west central Florida.
"Tampa Bay Day" held on
May 30, 2003, at MacDill Air Force Base, home of NOAA's
Aircraft Operations Center, included orientation talks,
tours of NOAA aircraft, and opportunities for NOAA employees
and leaders to meet in an informal social setting.
Speakers representing NWS, and NOAA's National Marine
Fisheries Service, National Ocean Service, and Aircraft
Operations Center presented overviews of their activities
and cited areas where regional collaboration may improve
personnel and fiscal effectiveness and enhance general NOAA
visibility in the Tampa Bay area.
Dan Noah, Warning Coordination Meteorologist from Tampa
Bay Area NWS Forecast Office, emphasized the various types
of severe weather that threaten Florida on an almost daily
basis. "Look at the number of people in Florida we lose
to lightning strikes every year, as compared to hurricanes
and tornadoes. And it's an everyday hazard during the summer,"
Noah said.
Tracy Dunn, Deputy Special Agent-in-Charge, Southeast
Enforcement Division, National Marine Fisheries Service,
spoke about his team's involvement in long-term investigations
of fisheries violations, netting the large fines, and penalties
we read about in the papers.
"Most people think of enforcement as catching them in
the act on the water. Our main job is longer term, with
much larger impacts if the work is done right," Dunn said.
Jim Jeansonne, National Ocean Service Damage Assessment
Center, discussed the heavy commercial use of Tampa Bay
and the numerous ways the ecosystem is impacted by this
necessary commerce. Leslie Craig, from the National Marine
Fisheries Service Restoration Center, highlighted the many
partnerships that pay off daily in funding and staffing
of sea grass plantings, beach cleanups, and other forms
of ecosystem restoration. Buck Sutter, Deputy Regional
Administrator
for Southeast National Marine Fisheries Service, summarized
the extensive National Marine Fisheries Service role in
southeast waters, covering activities, partners, and constituents
from commercial to recreational. Buck cited the usual
weekend
on the Florida coastal waters, "When at times you can almost
walk across the Bay from boat to boat."
Tampa Bay Day resulted from a 2001 initiative, when NOAA's
Administrator, Vice Admiral (ret.) Conrad C. Lautenbacher,
Jr., requested employee input on ways to improve NOAA. Seeking
to establish a process for better linkage, coordination,
and mutual understanding of the diverse NOAA elements in
local geographic regions. The NOAA regional coordination
program includes San Francisco Bay, Seattle/Tacoma, Ann-Arbor/Detroit,
the Tampa Bay area, and Hawaii.
NOAA employees, their families, and invited guests were
able to take a closer look at NOAA aircraft and boats, and
to meet one another to share experiences at a picnic on
the shores of Tampa Bay. It was a time for food, fun, families,
and fellowship at the MacDill Marina. The day ended with
a new understanding and appreciation of what "NOAA Tampa
Bay" is all about, what our colleagues go through while
serving NOAA, and a better understanding of who NOAA's constituents
are, said Jack Parrish, Meteorologist, Aircraft Operations
Center.
One NOAA employee who participated said, "I never thought
by coming across the Bay today, I'd learn so much about
what else is going on in my home office."
Captain Bob Maxson, Director, Aircraft Operations Center,
may have said it best. "Look at all of the talent gathered
together today," Maxson said. "Each office has so much to
offer the others, from joint outreach events to combined
training opportunities. It's just a matter of knowing who
to coordinate with on the other end of the phone line."
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WCM Honored
as Federal Professional of the Year
Warning Coordination
Meteorologist Brian Peters, WFO Birmingham, AL, was recently
honored as the Birmingham Area Federal Professional of the
Year. A committee of federal executives in the Birmingham
metropolitan area reviewed dozens of entries. Peters' selection
was a unanimous vote by the committee, recognizing his many
years of dedication to saving lives and public awareness.
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Lead Forecaster
Swims to Records
By Roger Vachalek
Meteorologist, Anchorage, AK, Weather Forecast Office
When Senior Forecaster
Joel Curtis isn't "free-styling" his way through the latest
model data and D2D AWIPS display at work, you will probably
find him either swimming laps indoors or searching for the
big swells in the Gulf of Alaska near Yakutat.
Curtis, on staff at the Anchorage, AK, Weather Forecast
Office, has a life-long passion for swimming. His skill
in the water has recently landed him four Alaskan State
Swimming Records for age group 50-54 in the 1000-, 500-,
200- and 100-yard freestyle events held May 15-18, 2003,
at the National Master's Short Course Yards Championships
in Tempe, AZ. His finish of 12:17.23 minutes in the 1000-yard
freestyle event brought him 11th place in the National Championships
this year.
For the past two years Curtis competed locally in Anchorage
in the Master's competition there, but this is the first
time he has competed at nationals. Placing 11th in the Nation
for the 1000-yard competition was a real kick for Curtis.
"I am very happy with my improvement, which was 24 seconds
off my best previous Master's time in the 1000," Curtis
said. That's an enormous improvement, according to Curtis,
who began swimming at age seven, competed through high school,
at the University of Virginia, and later swam Master's events
from 1982-1984. After a two-decade layoff, he resumed competitive
swimming in 2001.
To attain such high marks at the national meet takes,
as one might guess, a lot of training. Curtis says he averages
six workouts per week at one of three Anchorage area pools
including the YMCA, Alaska Pacific University, and Bartlett
High School. He belongs to a Master's swimming club called
"Swimming With Alaska Masters" which boasts 45 members.
The group is especially popular with area tri-athletes and
Curtis feels right at home.
Though not a tri-athlete himself, he does participate
in multiple sports. Surfing is another of his outdoor passions
and he recently returned from a nice break doing just that;
not for competition, but "for grins only." Returning to
work one Monday in early June, he excitedly exclaimed, "I
surfed eight days, and it was a blast." Besides the accolades
he has collected this spring, Curtis says his year round
regimen of swimming and surfing has the added benefit of
balancing the rigors of shift work and keeping him healthy.
As for the future, Curtis plans to compete in nationals
again, but the Alaska competition, he says is heating
up.
"A couple of 'ringers' have moved into my age group locally,"
he says, "and if I don't improve, I'll get beat." To help
improve his times, he has recently added weight lifting
to his training schedule. That and his coach is analyzing
video taken of his stroke technique from nationals this
year to help refine his swimming mechanics. "(After that)
I will try to swim with a 'catch-up' stroke like Ian Thorpe,"
Curtis quipped. Australian Ian Thorpe, of course, is an
Olympic Champion and world record holder in the 400-meter
freestyle event.
Curtis says he really wants to get to nationals again
in a couple years when he hits 55, and as determined and
disciplined as he is, there is no doubt he will return,
and maybe in an Ian Thorpe-like way, even setting some
new
state records.
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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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questions and comments to NWS.Communications.Office@noaa.gov
or mail to:
National Weather
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Communications Office
ATTN: W/COM
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