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| NOAA's NWS Focus -
September 23, 2002
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Ground
was broken for a new Doppler radar
in Gibson County, IN, September 14, 2002. Pictured
left to right are: Paducah MIC Bev Poole, Deputy
Undersecretary Scott Gudes, Evansville Chamber
of Commerce Vice President Sally Rideout-Lambert,
Indiana District 8 Rep. John Hostettler, NWS
Director Jack Kelly, and Larry Ordner, state
aid to Sen. Richard Lugar.
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a look at other NWS news, as submitted for the NOAA
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NOAA
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Weather Service Breaks Ground for Tri-State Doppler Radar
The NWS broke ground in Gibson County, IN, September 14,
2002, for a new Doppler radar to provide low-level coverage
to residents of the tri-state area of southwest Indiana,
southeast Illinois, and northwest Kentucky.
Deputy Undersecretary for Oceans and Atmosphere Scott B.
Gudes and NWS Director Jack Kelly represented the Department
of Commerce in the gathering of local dignitaries, emergency
managers, members of Congress, and the media for the event.
About 70 participants and residents gathered at the radar
site, located on the edge of a cornfield in rural Gibson
County.
Keynote speaker, Indiana District 8 Rep. John Hostettler
noted, "The National Weather Service and the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration are to be applauded
for their diligence in working to meet the weather detection
needs of the region."
Gudes said the tri-state radar highlights NOAA's commitment
to on-going improvement of scientific data-gathering tools
used to protect the American public. "Keeping up with
the weather requires advanced technology to predict it,"
Gudes said. "With this new radar, we've demonstrated
our resolve to do just that."
Kelly said the ground breaking represented "a very
concrete step into the 21st century" and emphasized
that forecasters at five weather forecast offices will use
the radar data. "Doppler radar gives our forecasters
more information to generate better forecast products,"
Kelly said.
NWS forecasters at Paducah and Louisville, KY; St. Louis,
MO; Lincoln, IL; and Indianapolis, IN, will use data from
the radar in their forecast and warning programs. Enterprise
Electronics Corporation was awarded an $8.7 million fixed
price contract to build and maintain the new radar for a
10-year period. The radar will be operational in January
2003.
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Director's Dialog:
The
Public-Private Partnership—Competition or Cooperation
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There has been a great deal of rhetoric during the past
several years about the relationship between the NWS and
private weather agencies, specifically regarding the future
role of the government and the private sector in providing
weather services to the public and other specialized user
groups.
The agricultural weather program has been transferred to
the private sector, and part of the surface observation
program is being transferred to the FAA (Federal Aviation
Administration). Rumors abound that other programs, such
as fire and aviation weather, may also be divested by the
NWS. Certainly, entities such as Accuweather want nearly
all of the NWS functions to be transferred to the private
sector.
So I have two questions here:
1) Where does the public-private partnership relationship
stand at this time?
and,
2) Do you envision any current NWS programs being transferred
outside the agency in the future?
—Jay Stockton, Senior Forecaster, WFO
Medford, OR
We face the challenge of providing weather data and information
to citizens, public officials, and private companies when
and where they want it, in a form easily understood by all.
The true spirit of the public-private partnership is about
working together, and the United States has the best weather
services in the world because we all work together well.
I don’t expect any dramatic shift in the government’s
role in providing weather information, but our services,
and those of our partners, will continue to evolve. Changes
like our move to the Interactive Forecast Preparation System
(IFPS) and the national digital database should result in
new market opportunities for businesses, without changing
the fundamental roles of either the NWS or the private sector.
Too often the level of rhetoric regarding the public-private
partnership has not been conducive to rational discourse.
We need to recast the debate from “competition”
to focus on defining appropriate roles which best serve
the public interest. In 2001, NOAA commissioned the National
Academy of Sciences to conduct a study on the appropriate
roles of government, private and research sectors in the
provision of weather services. The Academy was asked to
identify opportunities and barriers – whether driven
by science, technology, or organizational culture –
to improving weather services through this partnership.
A study panel comprised of respected experts from both inside
and outside the meteorological community chaired by Dr.
John Armstrong, former Senior Vice-President for Science
and Technology at IBM, will release their findings and recommendations
this December. To learn more about this study, check out
http://www7.nationalacademies.org/besr-publicprivate.
The NWS today is different than it was in 1995 when legislative
action redirected our approach to fire and agricultural
weather services. Today’s policy focus is on government
performance, and the NWS is widely regarded as one of the
best performers in government. You mentioned the FAA carrying
out certain responsibilities for surface observations, but
this is all within the context of the ASOS program which
we have shared with the FAA for decades. Finally, I’m
not surprised to hear there are rumors about all kinds of
changes in the NWS. I think if we all continue to focus
on giving great value to the American taxpayers these rumors
will take care of themselves.
—Jack Kelly, NWS Director
Have a question for the Director? Follow
this link for guidelines for submitting a Director's
Dialog question.
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Working
Together to Save Lives:
Fast Action To Add River/Rain Gauge Helps With Flash Flood
Warnings
With the approach of Tropical Storm Hanna toward the Southeast
U.S. coast on September 13, 2002, staff at the Southeast
River Forecast Center (SERFC) reviewed a list of new U.S.
Geological Survey (USGS) satellite gauges. The forecasters
were looking for gauges which could be used to obtain real-time
river and rainfall data to supplement existing ground-based
gauges and help with making better flood forecasts.
"We found a gauge in the area where we expected heavy
rain," said Brad Gimmestad, Development and Operations
Hydrologist (DOH) at the SERFC.
Gimmestad and his coworkers contacted the Hydrological
Automated Data System (HADS) team at NWS Headquarters to
have the station defined into the system so the River Forecast
Center would automatically receive the data during the event.
HADS is a part of the NWS Office of Hydrologic Development.
"The HADS staff jumped on our request, even contacting
the Georgia USGS office to resolve discrepancies, to get
that gauge defined into the HADS system and decoding the
satellite information correctly," Gimmestad said. With
the gauge defined properly, he said data was flowing through
NWS communication systems by the evening of September 13.
Hanna produced very heavy rains in Seminole County of Southwest
Georgia and the new gauge reported over 11 inches of rain,
with Spring Creek rising 12 feet in 24 hours. Although the
larger rivers did not go into flood, disastrous flash flooding
occurred in the county damaging many homes and businesses.
An NWS cooperative observer living 5 miles from the new
gauge reported 14.5 inches of rain. Gimmestad said the new
gauge data allowed the Tallahassee, FL, Weather Forecast
Office to monitor the rains in real time, providing ground
truth to support Flash Flood Warnings. The gauge data also
aided the SERFC in producing river forecasts during the
passage of Hanna.
For more information on how HADS uses satellite data, go
to http://www.nws.noaa.gov/oh/hads/.
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Health
Care Costs Rising in 2003; Flexible Spending Accounts Option
Coming in July
Premiums in the Federal Employees Health Benefits (FEHB)
Program will increase by an average 11 percent in 2003,
according to the Office of Personnel Management (OPM).
OPM announced that in 2003, the average premium increase
for fee-for-service plans is 10.5 percent, and for Health
Maintenance Organizations (HMO), the average increase is
13.6 percent. FEHB program enrollees with self-only coverage
will pay approximately $4.45 more in premiums per pay period;
those with family coverage will pay about $10.21 more per
pay period. On average, the government pays 72 percent of
FEHB premiums.
During the FEHB Program open season, which runs from November
11 through December 9, 2002, enrollees can select a new
health plan or stay with their current carrier. Employees
and retirees enrolled in the program can review the Open
Season guide and health plan brochures at the FEHB
Program web site.
OPM also announced a new program beginning in July 2003.
Federal employees may begin to establish personal Flexible
Spending Accounts (FSA), which they can later tap to pay
for the uncovered portions of qualified medical costs. FSAs
also can pay dependent-care expenses. All employee contributions
to FSAs are made from pre-tax earnings; there are no government
contributions to the program. A Request for Proposal will
be issued later this month for a third-party administrator
of the program. Information about the FSA program will be
updated, as it becomes available. By law, retirees, both
federal and non-federal, are not eligible to maintain FSAs.
Read the full OPM
news release.
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NWS Employee Sets Sail and Sees How the Wet Half Lives
Bob Elvander, of NWS's Office of Science and Technology
(OST), had no idea that his participation in this year's
Combined Federal Campaign (CFC) would lead to a 21-cannon
salute.
Elvander, a staff meteorologist in OST's Systems Engineering
Center, was chosen at random from among all NOAA CFC participants
to take part in a week-long cruise aboard the NOAA
Ship RONALD H. BROWN. The RH BROWN is the largest
in the fleet of research ships operated by NOAA's Office
of Marine and Aviation Operations.
A state-of-the-art oceanographic and atmospheric research
platform, the RH BROWN travels worldwide supporting scientific
studies to increase understanding of the world's oceans
and climate. But Elvander's cruise took place August 6-11,
2002, which happened to be the week that the RH BROWN had
the task of accompanying the barge towing the turret from
the Civil War ironclad USS MONITOR into the Hampton Roads,
VA, area. The MONITOR turret had just been recovered on
August 5, which marked the end of a multi-year effort by
NOAA, the Navy, and The Mariners' Museum to preserve key
components of the revolutionary ship before sea water corroded
the vessel beyond recognition.
The RH BROWN departed from Portsmouth, NH, on August 6,
and traveled around the tip of Cape Cod, down east of the
Cape past Nantucket Shoals, and then westward toward the
Delaware Bay area. Elvander was familiar with the area,
since he had grown up on Cape Cod, in Sandwich, MA.
"It was fun pointing out the points along the outer
Cape that I visited many times in my youth, and on vacation
with my family," he said.
The NOAA ship met up with the barge carrying the MONITOR
turret on August 8, and then accompanied it into Hampton
Roads and finally to the celebration at the main dock in
Newport News.
"There was a 21 cannon salute as the two ships entered
Hampton Roads, quite a sight!" said Elvander. The MONITOR
turret was successfully delivered to The Mariners' Museum
in Newport News, VA, where it will undergo a 10-year process
to preserve it. For more details on the MONITOR recovery
effort, see NOAA's
news release. After safely delivering the MONITOR
turret, the RH BROWN continued towards Charleston, SC, its
final destination.
For Elvander, the cruise was enjoyable for several reasons.
"I felt nostalgia for my cruise on the USS CHAIN (from
the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution) in 1962. There
have been vast improvements in ship quarters and equipment
since then," said Elvander. The trip also increased
his appreciation for the good science being done by NOAA.
And he said he was impressed with the receptiveness from
the crew, the officers, and the science personnel.
"After all," he said with a smile, "I was
just along for the ride!"
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Survey
Collecting Comments for Hydrologic Graphical Products
An NWS
hydrologic services survey is collecting comments
and suggestions from NWS staff on the types of hydrologic
products and information the NWS should provide in a graphical
format.
The NWS Office of Climate Water and Weather Services (OCWWS)
chartered the Advanced Hydrologic Prediction Service (AHPS)
Products and Information Team (APIT) to examine the agency's
hydrologic services and recommend a consistent core suite
of graphical hydrologic products and information which field
offices across the country would provide. The core suite
will support the full spectrum of hydrologic services from
flash floods through extended-range river forecasts. AHPS
is an initiative to modernize NWS hydrologic services and
better serve our partners and customers through the infusion
of science and technology.
"Our goal is to establish guidelines for providing
consistent information in a form people will understand
and use," said APIT Leader Gregg Rishel of NWS Western
Region Headquarters.
APIT includes representatives from the NWS Regions, the
Office of Hydrologic Development, the Office of Science
and Technology, and OCWWS. Additional information on the
APIT, including its charter, can be found on the Team's
web site at: http://www.srh.noaa.gov/lmrfc/ahpsteam/.
For more information, contact Rishel by e-mail, Gregg.Rishel@noaa.gov,
or by phone at (801) 524-5137.
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Also
On the Web...Volunteer Opportunities Website Consolidates
Lists
The White House recently unveiled a website offering information
about volunteer opportunities with Federal, state, and local
government agencies.
The Department of the Interior operates the web site http://www.Volunteer.Gov/Gov,
where Federal, state and local government agencies may post
government-supported volunteer opportunities. People seeking
opportunities to volunteer can search the website for opportunities
listed by geographic location, type of work, or date of
opportunity.
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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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