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| NOAA's NWS Focus -
July 22, 2002
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| Using
a sign language interpreter (right), Stan Johnson
of NWS Headquarters explains to a DeafWay II
conference attendee how existing
technologies can be used by the deaf to receive
severe weather and hazard warnings.
Read
all about it by following this link.
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here to take
a look at other NWS news, as submitted in the July
11, 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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Deputy Secretary of Commerce Visits Alaska
Samuel Bodman, Deputy Secretary of Commerce, met with NOAA
staff in an all-hands meeting at the Federal Office Building
in Anchorage on July 14. Representatives from the NWS Anchorage
Weather Forecast Office, the Alaska-Pacific River Forecast
Center, and Alaska Region Headquarters staff, as well as
personnel from NOAA’s National Marine Fisheries Service
and National Ocean Survey, attended. During the meeting,
NWS staff had the opportunity to give the Deputy Secretary
a general briefing on NWS operations in Alaska.
“The Deputy Secretary was very complimentary of the
NWS,” said Alaska Regional Director Rich Przywarty.
“He specifically mentioned our use of performance
measures. He also placed an emphasis on facilities and the
need to sustain quality working and living conditions for
our people. He asked a couple of questions about how we
calculate our verification statistics and where we get our
data for confirming a warning hit or miss.”
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Radar Product Generator Field Installations Complete
A significant upgrade to the Nation’s Next Generation
Radar (NEXRAD) system is now complete. The upgrade to the
NEXRAD Radar Product Generators replaces the legacy product
generators designed in the mid-1980s.
The Open Radar Product Generator (ORPG) Project Team installed
170 ORPG systems during the past year. The last of the field
ORPGs were installed on July 18, 2002, in Alaska, with the
overall ORPG deployment finishing two weeks ahead of schedule.
The radar product generator is the part of NEXRAD that
processes the raw data gathered by the radar, performs data
quality checks, creates radar images and products for display,
and sends those products to the ultimate users, such as
Advanced Weather Interactive Processing System (AWIPS).
“Benefits of the ORPG system include easier field
maintenance, faster technology upgrades, larger volumes
of data for users, and new software can be released to the
field more frequently,” said J. Rex Reed, Chief of
Engineering at the NEXRAD Radar Operations Center and overall
engineering lead for ORPG development and deployment.
The radar coverage provided by the NOAA/Air Force/Federal
Aviation Administration NEXRAD radars has led to significant
improvements in severe storm and flash flood warnings. The
ORPG installation, coupled with continued improvements to
the hardware and software used in the NEXRAD system, will
give forecasters higher-resolution radar images, higher
quality data, and the ability to scan storms in new ways.
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NWS
Enhances Product Generation Software
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Two big steps were taken with major releases of Interactive
Forecast Preparation System (IFPS) software during the week
of July 17, 2002, according to reports from the NWS Office
of Science and Technology.
Nationwide rollout began for Version 10.4 of IFPS. IFPS
10.4 will help forecasters throughout the NWS produce better
forecast products, including digital forecasts, and fire
weather forecasts. Meanwhile, field tests of Version 11
of IFPS began at five WFOs. IFPS11 will help a WFO temporarily
take over forecast operations for a neighboring WFO.
The NWS is implementing IFPS at Weather Forecast Offices
nationwide. Forecasters use the IFPS to create a digital
database of forecast values. This digital forecast database
is used to generate a wide variety of worded, tabular, graphical,
and digital forecast products.
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Online
Forum Available to Discuss NCEP Model Performance
An online newsgroup has been started to encourage discussion
of NCEP Model Performance between NWS forecast offices and
the Environmental Modeling Center (EMC) at the National
Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP).
The newsgroup has already helped communicate a problem
and subsequent fix to the Eta model, which NWS forecasters
heavily rely on for predicting today's weather and tomorrow's
weather.
The NWS/Cooperative Program for Operational Meteorology,
Education, and Training (COMET) uses newsgroups as part
of the numerical weather prediction (NWP) training program
sponsored by the Training Division in the NWS Office of
Climate, Water, and Weather Services (OCWWS).
“The new newsgroups provide an open forum where everyone
can see and benefit from the questions and answers, and
where model difficulties and EMC development efforts to
address them can be discussed,” said Greg Mandt, OCWWS
Director.
Previously, forecasters and Science and Operations Officers
(SOOs) with questions or concerns about the NCEP Eta and
AVN models had to send e-mail to EMC, prompting EMC to respond
to that individual. This process was time consuming for
NCEP and inefficient.
Two COMET staff members, Stephen Jascourt and Bill Bua,
monitor the Eta and AVN/MRF newsgroups, respectively, and
provide information and research questions by interacting
directly with NCEP developers.
In the case of the Eta model example, a Florida WFO alerted
EMC that the model was forecasting maximum temperatures
far in excess of those observed. Following quick examination
of the problem by Jascourt and EMC modelers, Jascourt posted
a message alerting all newsgroup readers of the hot forecasts,
that the problems may also occur in other dry-soil, low-altitude
locations, how to identify in the model data when and where
the problem is occurring, and that the model temperatures
a little higher above the surface were not adversely affected
and so could still be useful in helping predict surface
maximum temperatures. Several weeks of investigation and
subsequent testing of a solution followed, a progress update
with a rough timetable for operational implementation was
posted, and when the fix was made an assessment of revised
model performance was communicated.
“The initial alert from the WFO would have reached
other forecasters faster had that too been sent directly
to the newsgroup,” said Jascourt. Bua added “We
strongly encourage NWS forecasters to make use of this service,
not only to ask general questions about the models, but
also to bring cases of either exceptionally good or poor
model performance to our attention. We will investigate
the cases and, if appropriate, develop web-based training
on forecast issues identified in those cases.”
The newsgroups can be viewed from a link on the COMET web
page:
http://meted.ucar.edu/nwp/newsgroups.
The link invokes the web browser’s e-mail program.
Messages are read and new messages posted as with e-mail,
however they do not get mixed with regular e-mail. The web
page also has a link to complete instructions for subscribing
to the newsgroups.
Cases that have been developed into web-based training
can be found at:
http://meted.ucar.edu/nwp/pcu3/cases,
with more being added on a continuing basis. These include
both cases brought to the attention of Jascourt and Bua
by the field and cases that they have identified on their
own.
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Alaska Buoy Network Expansion Program Continues
The National Data Buoy Center recently established two
new moored buoy stations around Alaska. The stations are
south of Sequam Island in the central Aleutians and southwest
of Sitka in southeast Alaska. They were deployed by U.S.
Coast Guard Cutters SPAR and MAPLE. The new stations are
part of NOAA’s Alaska Buoy Network Expansion (ABNE)
program, which is adding seven new stations to provide better
coverage of a very large area in Alaska over a three-year
span. The ABNE will help forecasters develop watches and
warnings and provide more current conditions to mariners.
A third new buoy station will be established in August,
also off the coast of southeast Alaska. ABNE has led to
the establishment of five new buoy stations around Alaska
since summer 2001.
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Congress: What Do I Tell Them?
By: Scott A. Carter
Congressional Affairs Specialist
NOAA Office of Legislative Affairs
“What do I tell them?” is the question many
of you ask when learning that Members of Congress or their
staff may visit or are on the phone. Well, take a deep breath,
get your notes together, and go for it.
Weather impacts are of great interest to Capitol Hill.
So, what do you say? Here are basic rules to follow. First,
stick to what you know – weather and weather services.
You are the experts and the Members depend on you to provide
them with information on the programs that you use everyday
that they authorize and fund. You are their eyes and ears
to respond to their constituents’ questions.
Second, stay on message. The number one message I hope
you deliver is that your office is working to provide weather
services that help keep citizens of the Member’s district
or state safe. Talk about your partnerships with the local
emergency managers and the media. One way to discuss how
your office will improve services in the future is to discuss
items in the President’s
Budget that would enhance operations in your
local warning areas. As federal employees, we are legally
prohibited from lobbying our elected officials. However,
we have an obligation to educate elected officials about
programs that would help keep their citizens safe and local
economies strong.
Third, if you do not know the answer to a question, there
is nothing wrong in saying, “I do not know for sure,
but let me check and get back to you.” Members and
staff need accurate information and will appreciate your
honesty and willingness to get them accurate information
even if it takes a few days.
The Visit
What should you do if a Member or staff shows up for a
tour of your facility? Hopefully, you will know in advance.
I strongly suggest that all offices issue a standing invitation
to their Members to visit anytime the Member is back in
his/her district or state. Once you know the member is coming,
be prepared and prepare your office and staff. Is there
adequate parking? Are there any security issues that need
to be handled before their arrival? Does the office look
professional and clean? What staff will provide the briefing?
Is the equipment that you want to show the Member or staff
working? Having a plan and agenda are critical to the success
of the visit. Also remember, the Member or staff is there
to see your office. Please do not keep the Member in a room
and give a 30-minute PowerPoint presentation. Show your
guests how you work day-to-day and provide examples of the
many products you provide to the public. “Hands- on”
activities are a good way for guests to learn what you do.
For example, take your guests up in the 88-D tower and have
them release a radiosonde balloon, or go through the steps
for providing a forecast.
Our goal is to establish and maintain relationships with
our elected officials and keep them educated on what we
do. We need each other to make sound decisions – on
weather issues and the funding of our initiatives. You work
with their constituents daily, and working together as a
team, we can continue to foster and maintain good relationships
with the Congress.
Your work is critical to NOAA, and I appreciate your efforts.
I am always available to discuss and work with you when
you expect a visit or plan an event. Please call me at (202)
482-5426 or (703) 627-6473 if you have any questions or
need assistance. To learn more about Congressional Relations,
visit the NOAA
Legislative Affairs home page. In addition to
knowing the names of your Congressional members, you should
know who sits on our appropriations and authorization committees.
These names, as well as additional information for working
with Congress, can be found in an Acrobat file of the presentation
I delivered to the Eastern Region WCM Meeting in April.
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NWS Staff Showcase Warning Technologies at Deaf Conference
in Washington, DC
NOAA Weather Radio (NWR) outreach to deaf and hard of hearing citizens continued at the recent international conference
for the deaf hosted by Gallaudet University at the Washington,
DC Convention Center July 8-13, 2002. Deaf Way II involved
9,000 attendees from around the world, including deaf, hearing,
hard of hearing, late-deafened, deaf-blind, parents, and
students.
Representatives from NWS Headquarters and the Baltimore-Washington Forecast
Office in Sterling, VA, staffed the NWR exhibit designed to show NWR's abilities to reach people who are deaf or hard of hearing.
“We provided information on weather safety and demonstrated
how the deaf and hard of hearing can receive severe weather
warnings,” said Josephine Bergner of WFO Sterling.
During the three-day exhibit, attendees examined technology
used by, for and on deaf people, and saw the interconnectedness
of deaf, hard of hearing, and hearing people in an increasingly
technologically sophisticated world. NWS Dissemination Program
Manager Ken Putkovich said the NWS staff at the exhibit
shared information about a variety of technologies and methods
for communicating severe weather and hazard warnings to
the deaf, including NOAA Weather Radio adapters, pagers,
and e-mail notifications.
More details about the conference can be found at http://www.deafway.org/.
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Forecast Office Holding Name the Voice Contest
“Chance Storm,” is the name for the new male
voice heard on NOAA Weather Radio broadcasts from the NWS
Weather Forecast Office (WFO) in Wichita, KS, but the name
for his female partner is the subject of a local contest
the office is holding. The office is encouraging Weather
Radio listeners and visitors to the WFO Wichita website
to suggest a name. The winning entry will get a rain gauge
as a prize. (The NOAA's NWS Focus editors’ suggestion: Lotta
Sunshine). http://www.crh.noaa.gov/ict/namevoice.htm
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Getting Ink:
Weather
Channel, Federal Computer Week, Portland Oregonian
cover Fire Weather and Role of Incident Meteorologists
Weather Channel Set to Air Stories on Wildfires
and Role of Incident Meteorologists
A three-part series on fire weather is scheduled to air
on the Weather Channel July 22, 23, and 24, 2002.
The Weather Channel interviewed NWS Incident Meteorologist
(IMET) Tom Wright of the Missoula, MT, Weather Forecast
Office earlier in July as part of its coverage of the wildfires
in Colorado. The interview was done on site at the South
Hayman Fire near Lake George, CO. The subjects covered in
the interview included the IMET’s role, how the IMET
works with staff of the land management agencies during
the fires, and how the IMET prepares weather forecasts.
The Weather Channel also interviewed officials from the
U.S. Forest Service, taped daily weather briefings, and
gathered footage about life in the fire camps. Subsequently,
several other interviews were done in Colorado and with
officials at the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise,
ID.
Each story is expected to air hourly during the Weather
Channel’s Evening Edition, which airs between 9 p.m.
- 11 p.m. Eastern Daylight Savings Time.
Federal Computer Week Highlights New Technologies
for Use in Wildfire Fighting
The July 8 cover story in Federal Computer Week
outlines some of the “new or experimental technologies
developed by divisions of...NOAA.” Click
here for that story.
Fire Weather Meteorologist Role Profiled in Portland
Oregonian
Portland, OR, meteorologist John Saltenberger’s role
as an Incident Meteorologist (IMET) is explored in a July
17, 2002, article in the Portland Oregonian. Click
here to read the story.
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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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