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NOAA's NWS Focus
August 04, 2003
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CONTENTS formating spacer graphic
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- NOAA Joins Department of Homeland Security Citizens Corps formating spacer graphic
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- NOAA, NWS Leaders Answer Questions at White House Online Forum formating spacer graphic
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- Official Hurricane Records Revised formating spacer graphic
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- Forecast Office Briefs White House Homeland Security Council Staff formating spacer graphic
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- New Equipment Aids With Fighting Wildfires formating spacer graphic
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- NWS Activates AMBER Alert in Kentucky Abduction: Young Woman Found Unharmed formating spacer graphic
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- What the Hail?! formating spacer graphic
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- Radar Trainer Retires formating spacer graphic
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- Employee Milestones formating spacer graphic
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<p>Science and Operations Officer Jeff Tongue accompanied his family to the

Science and Operations Officer Jeff Tongue accompanied his family to the World Special Olympics Summer Games in Dublin, Ireland, in late June. Jeff's son, Scott, 15, earned Gold and Silver medals for Team USA in equestrian events. The games featured over 7,000 athletes from over 160 counties around the world. From left to right are: Jeff's wife Annamarie; son Ryan; Jackes, the horse Scott rode in competition; Scott; and Jeff. Jeff Tongue works at the New York City Weather Forecast Office.


 


NOAA Joins Department of Homeland Security Citizens Corps

NOAA is one of three new federal partners in the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Citizen Corps.

The Citizen Corps, coordinated by DHS's Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), was created to enable Americans to participate, on a voluntary basis, directly in homeland security efforts in their own communities. The Citizens Corps is a community-based initiative to engage all citizens in homeland security and community and family preparedness through public education and outreach, training opportunities, and volunteer programs.

The affiliation with Citizen Corps is expected to help expand NOAA Weather Radio coverage across the Nation, provide opportunities for volunteer weather observers through the Cooperative Observing Program, increase Storm Spotter training for citizens at local forecast stations, and promote other weather-related volunteer activities.

NOAA will participate by assisting with public education forums on disaster mitigation and preparedness, citizen training, and volunteer programs to safeguard life and property.

Read the FEMA news release.

 

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NOAA, NWS Leaders Answer Questions at White House Online Forum

The NOAA Administrator and NWS Deputy Director were guests of an online question and answer forum called Ask the White House last week. On July 30, 2003, Retired Navy Vice Adm. Conrad C. Lautenbacher, Ph.D., Undersecretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere and NOAA Administrator, offered his views on the Earth Observation Summit and replied to questions relating to the summit, hurricanes, and NOAA's mission. NWS Deputy Director John Jones participated in another chat on August 1, 2003, and took questions on hurricanes, tornadoes, emergency planning, careers in meteorology, and the state of the science in meteorology.

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Official Hurricane Records Revised

The NOAA Hurricane Research Division recently finished revising the Atlantic basin hurricane database (HURDAT) records for the second half of the 19th Century and early 20th Century.

HURDAT is the official record of tropical storms and hurricanes for the Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, and Caribbean Sea, including those that have made landfall in the United States. This information on tropical cyclones is revised using an enhanced collection of historical meteorological data in the context of today's scientific understanding of hurricanes and analysis techniques.

The NOAA National Hurricane Center's Best Track Change Committee approved more than 5,000 additions and alterations for the years 1851-1910.

Among the revisions:

The 1886 hurricane season has been analyzed as the busiest on record for the continental United States, with seven hurricanes hitting the United States.

The 1890s was one of the busiest decades on record for the Atlantic seaboard of the United States. Four major hurricanes impacted the coast from Georgia northward.

Read the complete NOAA news story, which highlights the most significant revisions.

 

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Forecast Office Briefs White House Homeland Security Council Staff

Members of the White House Homeland Security Council Staff and OMB representatives handling Homeland Security budget issues visited the Sterling, VA, Weather Forecast Office (WFO) on July 30, 2003, to learn more about the potential role of NOAA Weather Radio (NWR) in homeland security. In addition to a briefing on NWR, the WFO Sterling staff also showed the visitors the National Digital Forecast Database, Advanced Weather Interactive Processing System, and the modernized forecast process.

"The OMB people showed particular interest in the NWS performance measures and how we used them to improve our forecasts and warnings," said WFO Sterling Meteorologist-In-Charge Jim Travers. NWS Headquarters staff also attended to help answer national and policy questions.

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New Equipment Aids With Fighting Wildfires

With the summer 2003 wildfire season heating up, NOAA Incident Meteorologists (IMETs) are using some new equipment to improve their access to critical forecasting data and provide better service to their customers.

The All-hazards Meteorological Response Systems (AMRS) has been implemented nationally for the wildfire season. The equipment combines advanced computer software and two-way satellite communications. AMRS provide NOAA meteorologists high-speed access to state-of-the-art weather data when at a remote location without relying on the use of phone lines.

"With the AMRS system, we can be up and functioning, less than an hour after arrival, in the middle of a vacant field, if necessary," said NOAA IMET Tom Wright, based at the Missoula, MT, Weather Forecast Office (WFO). Wright most recently was supporting the Robert Fire near Columbia Falls, MT.

With another new tool, interactive weather data request and display software, known as FX-NET, IMETs can now access mesoscale numerical models, NOAA satellite imagery, specific wind speed and direction at various heights from the nearby Doppler weather radars or remote sensors by using one software program.

"The FX-NET software allows us to access nearly the same set of data we can at the WFO," Wright said. "The FX-NET interface is nearly identical to the AWIPS interface we use in the WFO. In fact, I think there are some functions that actually work better."

Read more about the mix of tools IMETS are using this wildfire season.

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NWS Activates AMBER Alert in Kentucky Abduction: Young Woman Found Unharmed

Within two hours of activating the Kentucky AMBER Alert system, including state-wide NOAA Weather Radio broadcasts, a 16-year-old girl was found and her alleged abductors captured July 31, 2003.

State officials said the case was the first use of the AMBER Alert system in Kentucky. The alert carried detailed descriptions of the two men who were being sought, and soon afterward the abductors released the girl.

Read the Louisville Courier-Journal article here.

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What the Hail?!

The National Extremes Committee, led by the National Climatic Data Center, certified a new record for the largest hailstone ever collected and measured in the United States. On June 22, 2003, a hailstone recovered in Aurora, NE, had a diameter of 7 inches and a circumference of 18 3/4 inches. This hailstone was larger than the previous record large hailstone that fell in Coffeyville, KS, in 1970 (5.7 inch diameter and 17.5 inch circumference). An accurate weight could not be determined for the Aurora hailstone; so the Coffeyville hailstone of 1970 remains the heaviest hailstone weighed and verified in the United States at 1.67 pounds.

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Radar Trainer Retires

One of our readers in Norman, OK, asked us to note the recent retirement of a NOAA employee known to many forecasters. Don Burgess recently completed his federal career as Chief of the Warning Research and Development Division of the National Severe Storms Laboratory. But NWS employees may know Burgess from his previous work at the Radar Operations Center, where he was in charge of the training on the NEXRAD Doppler weather radar system when it was new. Read the NOAA news release here.

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Employee Milestones

  • Click here to see NEW APPOINTMENTS/TRANSFERS to NWS through July 31, 2003.
  • Click here to see RETIREMENTS/DEPARTURES from NWS through July 31, 2003.

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Take a look at other NWS news, as submitted for the NOAA Weekly Report

Click here to take a look at NOAA-wide employee news, as posted in the latest issue of AccessNOAA

Have news you'd like to spread using NOAA's NWS Focus? Have feedback on how we can improve NOAA's NWS Focus and employee communications? We want to hear from you! E-mail us at NWS.Focus@noaa.gov.

 

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