|
|
|
NOAA's NWS Focus
|
| September 15, 2003 |
|
|
|
|
| |
 |
|
| Local
TV weathercasters joined the Birmingham,
AL,
Weather Forecast Office at a local ballpark
recently for SKYWARN/Storm Spotter Appreciation
Night. Pictured from left to right are Richard
Jacks (Channel 13), Jerry Tracey (Channel
13),
James Spann (Channel 33/40), Tim Coleman (Channel
42), Bonnie McLaughlin (Channel 42), David
Neal
(Channel 6), Stephanie Walker (Channel 13),
and Brian Peters, Warning Coordination Meteorologist
at WFO Birmingham, AL. Read
the story below.
|
|
|
|
| Fiscal
Year 2004 Training Plan Available Online
The Implementation
Plan for Training and Education for Fiscal Year 2004 (IP04),
developed by the Office of Climate, Water, and Weather Services
(OCWWS), Training Division is available online.
IP04 is a comprehensive summary of all national training
the OCWWS Training Division will conduct during FY 2004.
The plan includes a full list of residence courses offered,
as well as other non-residence training activities. Funding
for these activities is allocated among categories including
meteorology, hydrology, engineering, management/leadership,
systems, and cooperative observing.
"IP04 is a valuable resource for all NWS staff to access
training in support of operational office needs and meet
goals defined in their Individual Development Plans," commented
Eli Jacks, Acting Chief of the OCWWS Training Division.
The plan is the end result of the National Strategic Training
and Education Plan (NSTEP) process for determining and prioritizing
national training requirements, and was approved by all
NWS Regional and Headquarters Directors.
IP04 is available on the WWW at http://www.nws.noaa.gov/om/os/org/training/IP04.pdf.
Back
to Top |
|
NDFD
Technical Workshop Presentations Available Online
Approximately
70 individuals from private, public, and academic sector
organizations
and 30 NWS staff members took part in the National Digital
Forecast Database (NDFD) Technical Workshop held in Silver
Spring, MD, on August 13, 2003.
The workshop provided details on the technical aspects
of NWS digital forecasts made available via the NDFD.
Greg Mandt, Director of the Office of Climate, Water, and
Weather Services, provided a historical background of NWS
digital forecasting and described how NWS will engage
its partners and customers as it continues to enhance the
products and services made available via NDFD.
Participants described their experiences
accessing the NDFD gridded data, and made recommendations
for enhancing the NDFD.
Representatives
from the Meteorological Development Laboratory and the
Office of the Chief Information Officer provided technical
presentations on the NDFD.
Back
to Top |
|
| Hawaii
Civil Defense Appreciates NWS Support in Recent Hurricane
Hawaii dodged
significant damages from Hurricane Jimena recently, but the
NWS forecast and warning efforts didn't go unnoticed by the
Hawaii Office of Civil Defense, which e-mailed this excerpted
"thank you" to the Honolulu, HI, Weather Forecast Office:
"On behalf of Governor Lingle and Major General Robert
Lee, we extend our thanks for the support, preparedness,
and assistance in responding to Hurricane/Tropical Storm
Jimena. We wish to extend a special thanks to Mr. Jim Weyman,
National Weather Service-Honolulu Forecast Office and his
team of professionals for their outstanding skills and concern
for public safety."
NWS also received letters of appreciation from the Jaycees
and the Honolulu Executive Board. In the early morning
on
September 1, 2003, Jimena weakened from a hurricane to
a tropical storm and took a turn southward passing approximately
125 miles south of the Big Island. The Big Island experienced
tropical storm force winds which uprooted some trees and
caused a power outage for 1,500 people; minor flooding
produced by heavy rainfall in some areas; and 10-15 feet
of high
surf which closed some roads and produced significant beach
erosion and limited property damage. Jimena continued
on
its west southwest track and passed well south of the other
Hawaiian Islands. The only impacts to Maui, Oahu, and
Kauai
Counties were 6-8 feet of surf, a slight increase in wind
speeds, and scattered light to moderate rain showers.
Back
to Top |
|
| Summer
Projects Benefit Forecast Office, Challenge Interns
By Mike Heathfield
WCM Grand Rapids, MI, Weather Forecast Office
This summer
the Grand Rapids, MI, Weather Forecast Office (WFO) hosted
five interns: four from Central Michigan University (CMU)
and one from Lyndon State College. Each of the interns was
also provided a mentor and a project that would enhance or
improve operations at the forecast office.
"The amount of work that the interns were able to complete
over the summer surpassed all expectations of the WFO staff,"
said Meteorologist-In-Charge Daniel Houser. Several of
the projects related to enhancing the forecast office's
climatology
program, and some of the interns helped with storm damage
surveys.
Senior Forecaster Bill Marino mentored Trisha Bean, a
CMU senior. Trisha's project involved transcribing the
old
climate record books from the Lansing, Muskegon, and Grand
Rapids Weather Service Offices into common formats and
checking
accuracy of the results to save the operations staff time
when answering climate questions. Trisha also observed
and
assisted with AWIPS and NOAA Weather Radio operations.
Marshall Stoner, a junior at Lyndon State, wrote a software
program to translate climate records for Lansing and Muskegon
from Midwest Climate Center formats into formats that XmClimate
was able to read. He did the same thing for climate spreadsheets
of Grand Rapids data from1902-1948, and he manually entered
Grand Rapids climate data from 1898 through 1901 into
the
XmClimate format.
Mike Griesinger is a senior at CMU who has interned at
WFO Grand Rapids the past two summers. He worked with
Science
Operations Officer Randy Graham to enter information on
ceilings and visibilities associated with thunderstorms
into a database in support of an aviation climatology study.
Griesinger also created Michigan seasonal snowfall maps
in Arc-View for the period from 1950 to 2000, and developed
a Lake Effect Snowfall (LES) database and created radar
and satellite loops for case studies of LES events. He
also worked with Graham on collecting data for thunderstorm
research
that he will complete during his senior year at CMU.
Ryan Collins, a senior at CMU, entered contact information
for over 800 spotters into the Arc-View database this
summer.
He also completed a Power Point briefing describing the
Volunteer Emergency Services Support Agency (VESSA)/ WFO
Grand Rapids Mesonet and the cooperative data sharing plan
the forecast office has with the Michigan Agricultural
Weather
Network (MAWN). Collins updated the Marine verification
database, and, working with Service Hydrologist (SH) Mark
Walton, Collins developed a naming scheme that allowed
him to customize the WFO Grand Rapids basins for use in
the
Flash Flood Monitoring Program (FFMP).
Patrick Dol, a senior at CMU, helped work severe weather
events from the field and called in reports of damage,
or
lack of it, during his real-time spotting support. He also
helped with post-storm damage surveys and helped verify
a number of warnings with his post-event surveys. Dol's
major project of the summer was working with Walton, who
mentored Dol in his river climatology project. The project
is a database that answers questions such as: How often
does a forecast point exceed bankfull...exceed flood stage
or go 1 foot, 2 feet, 3 feet, or more above flood stage.
Forecasters will use this information as a decision assistance
tool.
"We are proud of and thank all of our summer interns for
their volunteering their time to help us out this summer
with some projects that needed to be done and wish them
the best in the upcoming school year," said Houser. He said
one of the projects the interns enjoyed was a field survey
to install a river gauge on Plaster Creek with Walton.
"The part of their summer they liked the most was working
with the staff here at Grand Rapids, manipulating data on
AWIPS and assisting answering phones during severe weather
events," Houser said. Some said the experience of working
at WFO Grand Rapids gave them a feel for what we in NWS
Operations do, and it helped them decide if being a meteorologist
at a WFO is a career path they wished to pursue.
Back
to Top |
|
| Triple
Play: Storm Spotter/SKYWARN Event Combines Baseball, TV
Meteorologists, and Outreach
A minor league
baseball stadium was the unique location for a local Storm
Spotter/SKYWARN Appreciation Night, co-sponsored by the Birmingham,
AL, Weather Forecast Office (WFO).
This was a first in the Birmingham market, and according
to Birmingham Warning Coordination Meteorologist Brian
Peters,
may have been a first for anywhere in the country. On
August 14, 2003, NWS meteorologists and TV weathercasters
from all four of the major television networks in Birmingham
appeared together for Storm Spotter/SKYWARN Appreciation
Night at the Hoover Metropolitan Stadium. The Hoover Met
near Birmingham is the location of the Birmingham Barons
double-A baseball team, who played the Mobile Bay Bears
that night.
The Birmingham WFO worked in conjunction with the Alabama
SKYWARN Foundation, Inc., which sponsored a discount ticket
for the event. Over 900 storm spotters from Jefferson County
and all surrounding counties were invited along with others
interested in storm spotting or severe weather. The Birmingham
WFO made the recognition night a public outreach effort
at the same time. An NWS exhibit in the stadium concourse
gave people an opportunity to learn about severe weather
safety and the National Weather Service and meet all of
the local television weather celebrities.
All four major television network weather celebrities
spent an hour before the game signing autographs, shaking
hands, and having photos taken with spotters and other fans.
"The Birmingham WFO owes a special thanks to Bonnie McLaughlin
from CBS 42, David Neal from Fox 6, James Spann of ABC 33/40,
and Jerry Tracey from NBC 13 for their support in drawing
attention to the contributions of storm spotters and making
the event an overwhelming success," said Peters.
Back
to Top |
|
| NWS
Earns Exhibit Award at State Fair
During the recent
2003 Upper Peninsula State Fair in Michigan, the NWS exhibit
booth was recognized as the "Best Governmental Agency Exhibit"
at the Fair, held in Escanaba, MI.
The exhibit, staffed by Marquette, MI, Weather Forecast
Office (WFO) personnel, entertained and informed fair-goers
by providing real-time weather forecasts, weather safety
information, and hands-on displays during the six day event,
August 12-17, 2003. More than 100,000 people attended the
event.
"Our staff really put a lot of time and effort into making
the booth interactive and informative," said Ed Fenelon,
Meteorologist-In-Charge of the Marquette, MI, Forecast Office.
"Between the tornado simulator and the NOAA Weather Radio
give-aways, we were a popular booth. We were able to give
fair patrons real-time weather forecasts and teach them
about weather safety," noted Fenelon.
In the exhibit, NWS real-time forecast web graphics were
projected onto a large screen for fair attendees. Items
displayed in the exhibit included Doppler radar images,
wind sensors, and a maximum-minimum temperature sensor.
According to Fenelon, one of the most popular displays was
the Cooperative Observer Hall of Fame (featuring pictures
of long-time local weather observers).
The NWS competed against several other federal and state
government agencies to win the "Best Governmental Agency
Exhibit" award. To determine award winners, Fair officials
considered each exhibit's neatness of display, courtesy
of workers manning the display, attire and general appearance
of workers, and creativity (i.e., decorating appeal, arrangement
of display materials). This is the second year in a row
that the NWS exhibit has won an award at the fair.
NWS staff members involved in this event included: Andy
Just (team leader), Bruce Cromell, Don Rolfson, Gwen Akom,
Jason Alumbaugh, Joe Lester, Jack Rice, Kevin Crupi, Marv
Taulbee, Mike Dutter, Dave Petrovich, and Robin Turner.
"We are proud to have won this award," said Fenelon. "Plans
are already underway for the 2004 fair. We want to make
the NWS booth even more interesting, informative, and fun
next year."
Back
to Top |
| 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. |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
| 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
|
|
|
|
|
|
|