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| NOAA's NWS Focus Newsletter -
July 25, 2001
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NWS FY 02 Appropriation Clears House: Next Stop, The Senate
On July 18, 2001, the full House of Representatives approved
the FY 02 House Appropriation Bill (HR 2500) for Commerce,
Justice, State, and Related Agencies (CJS). The bill received
overwhelming support from House members, receiving over
400 "yes" votes in the final tally. Ranking Minority Member
Jose Serano and Chairman Frank Wolf crafted a bi-partisan
bill that addressed controversial issues at the subcommittee
level to avoid lengthy debates on the House floor. The Committee
leadership stated certain programs were not fully funded
because the Senate would fund the program and the two sides
would resolve the differences at Conference.
"We hope this is the case for the cuts to NWS Alaska Buoys
and WFO Construction and OAR's Tsunami Hazard Mitigation,"
said Steve Gallagher, Director of Budget Planning for the
NWS. Gallagher added that bi-partisan support for this bill
in the House is good news for NOAA and the NWS. In recent
years, the CJS bill has passed the House by narrow margins
and included controversial amendments that delayed final
passage. Barring a holdup in the Senate, this is expected
to speed up final passage of the NWS appropriation for FY
02.
The House Bill provides $729 million for the NWS, an increase
of $36.2 million over the FY 01 appropriation, and $1.4
million over the FY
02 President's Request. The House Bill approved the
NWS earmarks from the Subcommittee markup, including the
Huntsville WFO, relocation of the Kessler NEXRAD, and NWR
transmitters for Wisconsin and Wyoming.
Links for more information:
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Update:
Applications Due to USDA for NWR Transmitter Grants
Time is short for grant applications from rural areas to
help place NOAA Weather Radio transmitters in rural areas
not covered or poorly covered at this time. To date, the
U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA's) Rural Utilities
Service has received about 30 applications, from across
the country, for more than $2 million of the available $5
million in grant money contained in the FY 01 USDA budget
to facilitate the expansion of NOAA Weather Radio system
coverage.
The grant program will provide funds, on an expedited basis,
for use in rural areas and communities of 50,000 or less.
Grant funds are available immediately and applications will
be processed on a first-come, first-serve basis until the
appropriation is completely exhausted.
Applications for grants should be submitted by August 30th
to ensure that they are received and processed before the
end of September.
If you have questions concerning this program, call Craig
Wulf, USDA, at 202-720-8427 or Orren E. Cameron, USDA, at
202-690-4493. Details of the grant program, as posted in
the Federal Register, are available at http://www.usda.gov/rus/telecom/publications/weather%20radio%20nofa.htm.
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| NOAA,
NASA Form Joint Center for Satellite Data Assimilation
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NOAA and NASA have formed a "virtual" center aimed at combining
the strengths of both organizations to advance the use of
satellite resources for improving numerical weather prediction.
The majority of the work performed by the new Joint Center
for Satellite Data Assimilation (JCSDA) will be distributed
geographically and organizationally among NOAA and NASA
components.
According to Stephen J. Lord of NCEP's Environmental Modeling
Center, JCSDA efforts will focus on improving the use of
satellite data in current operational and research weather
forecast systems, and preparing for new instruments to be
launched later this decade. Initial activities will concentrate
on setting up the infrastructure for the center, including
developing and maintaining computer codes, establishing
system databases, and developing software which will be
shared among the satellite data assimilation community.
Formal activities of the center have begun with multi-agency
budget support using FY 01 funds. Initial support for the
center comes from NWS, NESDIS, NASA Goddard Space Flight
Center, and the NOAA OAR Office of Weather and Air Quality
Research.
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NOAA Home Page Maintains Popularity
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At the half-year mark, the NOAA home page continues to
be one of the most popular and most visited federal government
Web sites, especially during severe weather events across
the USA, according to Greg Hernandez, online editor and
webmaster for the NOAA home page.
From January through June 2001, the NOAA home page received
more than 92.4 million hits. This averages out to more than
529,000 hits per day. Most of the visits come from the dot-com
world, 60 percent. The dot-net domain accounts for 20 percent
of the visits, and dot-gov accounts for a little over seven
percent of the NOAA home page traffic. By year's end, the
NOAA home page could top the 200 million mark.
"The news items on the NOAA home page are the key ingredients
which continue to bring people to the page each day," said
Hernandez. He added that the most popular page continues
to be the weather page. In each of the past six months,
the weather page remained solidly in first place. "There's
no doubt that when weather happens across the USA the NOAA
home page is the place where people come to find out the
latest."
The top five pages during this six-month period are as
follow:
The NOAA home page received accolades from the Boston Globe
calling it "an addictive site." USA Today Online selected
"NOAA's Drought Information Center" as the "Hot Pick" of
the day on Tuesday, June 12, 2001. Nielsen NetRatings rated
the NOAA home page number one during the week of June 18,
2001. It was number two the previous week.
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900
Visitors Tour New York Forecast Office
The NWS Forecast Office in Upton, NY, was the featured
facility of Brookhaven National Laboratory's Summer Sunday
Tours on July 22, 2001. More than 900 people attended a
45-minute tour of the facility that featured an outdoor
show-and-tell of observation systems, a conference room
briefing on NWS operations, an operations room briefing
covering technologies used in forecasting, and an outdoor
briefing that promoted hurricane and thunderstorm awareness
and safety. The highlight of the day was a 1:30 p.m. radiosonde
launch, which was witnessed by up to 500 people as the song
"Up Up and Away" (by The Fifth Dimension) played. Nine NWS
staff and two volunteers teamed to make this a highly successful
and entertaining community outreach activity.
A virtual tour of the Upton office is available on the
WFO Upton web site at http://www.nws.noaa.gov/er/okx/tour/welcome.html.
The BergenSkywarn website also posted photos of the event
on their
site.
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Anniversary:
Kansas River Flood Set Records in 1951
This July marks the 50th anniversary of the great Kansas
River flood of 1951 which killed 28 people and caused thousands
to abandon their homes, schools, and businesses. In all,
the flood was estimated to have caused $935 million in damages
and to have displaced half a million people from their homes
in 150-200 cities and towns.
Additional information on the flood and its many impacts
can be found on the Central
Region home page, including details on local impacts
of the 1951 flood and current flood forecasting practices,
may be found on the web pages of the Missouri
Basin River Forecast Center and the NWS Forecast Office
in Topeka,
KS.
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On
the Web: New Outreach Tools Available
- The NWS Eastern Region Hydrologic Services Division,
in cooperation with the Southeast River Forecast Center,
has produced a "Tropical Cyclones and Inland Flooding"
awareness guide, available at http://www.nws.noaa.gov/er/hq/flooding/brochure.htm.
The Guide provides a historical perspective of the major
tropical cyclone-associated inland flooding events, as
well as NWS definitions, and information on what preparedness
steps individuals and communities can take to keep themselves
safe.
- The NWS Communications Office has posted an updated
version of the general NWS briefing package, affectionately
known internally as the "NWS 101" briefing. This is a
12-slide presentation for a general public audience that
answers the "Who we are and what we do" questions. It
can be downloaded in Corel Presentations, Microsoft PowerPoint,
and Adobe PDF file formats. Local offices can download
the format of their choice for customization. See the
Communications Office "Tools" page at http://www.nws.noaa.gov/com/tools.htm
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| Have news you'd like to spread using NOAA's NWS Focus?
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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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