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| NOAA's NWS Focus Newsletter -
November 2, 2001
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Friends Remember Pacific Region Director Dick Hagemeyer
The National Weather Service, along with the world meteorological
community, is mourning the recent death of NWS Pacific Region
Director, Dick Hagemeyer. You can read anecdotes posted
by his colleagues from around the world at the Memories
of Dick Hagemeyer site, and you may add your own by
sending it to Hagemeyer.memories@noaa.gov.
Since the site first opened, a collection of photo memories
of Dick has been added. In addition, the following sites
are recommended:
Jim Weyman, MIC at WFO Honolulu, has been appointed Acting
Director of Pacific Region until a permanent replacement
is selected.
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New
Flood Outlook is Operational
A new five-day flood outlook became an official NWS product
on November 1. The outlook identifies areas at risk of significant
river flooding. For the past two months NWS River Forecast
Centers tested the product and solicited feedback from partners
and customers. The outlook is developed by each of the 13
regional RFCs throughout the United States, and is available
to the public with a graphical display on the Internet.
An additional map showing flood potential for the contiguous
48 states will be available through the Emergency Managers
Weather Information Network, NOAA Port, the Family of Services
and the NOAA Web site.
More information and Web links to these new flood outlooks
can be found at http://www.nws.noaa.gov/oh/hic/flood_outlook/index.html.
Click here for the initial NOAA's NWS Focus story on the flood
outlook http://www.nws.noaa.gov/com/fs082901.htm.
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| NWS
Releases Tropical Storm Allison Service Assessment Report
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On October 30, 2001, the NWS released a Service Assessment
for the Texas/Louisiana flood event associated with Tropical
Storm Allison. The costliest tropical storm in the nation's
history, in June 2001 Allison left 24 dead and caused more
than $5 billion in damage in Texas and Louisiana before
moving eastward to wreak havoc along the Gulf and East Coasts
of the United States. Read the full NOAA news story here
http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories/s797.htm.
The report is available online at http://205.156.54.206/om/service_assessments/.
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NWS Web Design Receives NOAATECH Award
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Mike Hudson and Mark Rew, members of the NWS Corporate
Web Image Design Team, received the NOAATECH 2002 award
for IT accessibility on behalf of their team for creating
a new corporate web image for the NWS, during the NOAATECH
2002 workshop, held October 22-24, 2001, in Silver
Spring, MD. The award is for web sites that show the greatest
range of accessibility for all users. The citation listed
the features that make the new NWS corporate web design
exceptional:
- A common graphical presentation consistently using the
NOAA colors,
- Quick navigation features to useful and urgent information,
and
- Section 508-compliant features built into the design
providing accessibility and usability for people with
disabilities.
In presenting the award at the conference, Bill Turnbull,
Deputy NOAA CIO, stated that the "NWS internet corporate
image work is a good Section 508 best practice which illustrates
that one can have full compliance with Section 508 and still
have a high degree of graphics." An abstract of Mike Hudson's
conference paper, "Developing an Internet Corporate Image
for the National Weather Service" has been posted on the
NOAATECH
2002 website. Here is a complete list of the members
of the NWS Corporate Web Image Design Team.
| Mike Hudson |
WFO Kansas City/Pleasant Hill, MO |
| David Zaff |
Western Region HQ, SSD |
| Dennis Cain |
WFO Fort Worth, TX |
| Jim Fenix |
NWSHQ, W/OS |
| Loly Brandes |
NWSHQ, W/CIO |
| Mark Rew |
NWSHQ, W/CIO |
| Mark Mutchler |
WFO North Platte, NE |
| Matt Strahan |
Southern Region HQ, CWWD |
| Maureen Ballard |
WFO Honolulu, HI |
| Mike Gerber |
NWSHQ, W/OS |
| Ricardo Romero |
NCEP Central Operations |
| Rick Leach |
RSIS, Contractor in NWSHQ Graphics Unit |
| Ron Jones |
WFO Columbia, SC |
The current schedule calls for the new NWS web design to
be deployed throughout the organization during the Summer
2002.
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Health
Insurance Costs on the Rise
Health insurance premiums for federal workers will rise
approximately 13 percent in 2002 according to the Office
of Personnel Management (OPM). On average, enrollees in
the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP) will
pay about $4.32 more biweekly than this year, while families
will see their biweekly payments rise an average $11.77,
according to a recent
OPM press release. The new premiums go into effect in
January 2002. The FEHBP open season runs from November 12
to December 10, 2001.
Health insurance premiums for the nine million FEHBP enrollees
have risen a combined 37 percent in the last four years
- nearly ten percent higher than the combined national rate
increase over the same period according to a new study by
the Center for Studying Health System Change. Outpatient
care and rising drug costs are identified as the primary
reasons for rising health care premiums nationwide.
Robin Johnson is on the front line of all of these changes
in her position as a NOAA Human Resources Specialist working
in the Benefits office. She often counsels employees, "The
changes in the health care industry are causing all of us
to closely evaluate our situations and select a plan that
best meets our needs, knowing that the cost of services
continue to rise. Even so, I believe that the federal government
still offers one of the best benefits packages of all employers
nationwide." OPM Director Kay Coles James agrees, saying
in a recent OPM press release, "While I am not pleased the
FEHBP premiums are going up in January, we can say with
certainty that the FEHBP continues to be a strong model.
The FEHBP has important features, including choice of health
plans and competitive benefit packages, as well as no pre-existing
condition limitations or waiting periods. Also, in sharp
contrast with trends in the private sector, the FEHBP plans
continue to cover all eligible retirees and their spouses."
During the upcoming open season, all eligible federal employees
and retirees can select a new health plan or stay with their
current one. If you plan to stay with your current carrier,
you do not have to do anything. Employees are encouraged
to use the FEHBP website to review open season information:
www.opm.gov/insure/health.
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WFO
Brownsville Conducts Weather-Focused Spanish Language Training
With WFO Brownsville, TX, situated so close to the Mexican
border, the office has an interest in communicating in Spanish.
To enhance services provided by the office, SOO Shawn Bennett
recently made arrangements with the Villa Maria Language
Institute in Brownsville for 40 hours of onsite Spanish
language instruction for ten WFO staff members. "We want
to have more capacity and have more ability to respond to
our customers' needs," said Bennett, who previously worked
at WFO San Juan, PR, where he participated in a similar
Spanish training effort. He said about 70 percent of people
served by the Brownsville office speak Spanish as their
primary language, and the staff get many requests for interviews
from Spanish-language news media. The staff members who
took the class had varying levels of Spanish-language skills.
Two instructors divided the group into a beginners and an
intermediate/advanced class, and two-hour classes were held
Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays over a seven week period
in August and September. Bennett said the training included
writing and speaking lessons and conversational immersion
led by an instructor. The class studied meteorological terms,
translated newspaper articles about the weather, and performed
mock radio and television interviews.
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Comma
Here, She Said
Leave it in, take it out? One of the most irksome punctuation
decisions writers and editors face is when to use a comma.
And, when to do without. If you refer to the GPO Style
Manual, http://www.access.gpo.gov/styleman/2000/browse-sm-00.html,
you'll find more than 20 rules on the use of this tiny,
troublesome mark.
Let's examine several of the many ways commas are properly
used:
- to separate two main clauses (each clause expresses
a complete thought),
- in a compound sentence (a combining of two simple sentences),
and
- when they are joined by a coordinating conjunction (and,
but, or, nor).
Examples:
Two simple sentences expressing complete thoughts:
- Funds are available to revise the programming study.
- The cost, schedule, and space allocation must be reviewed.
A compound sentence combining the two thoughts joined by
a coordinating conjunction:
- Funds are available to revise the programming study,
but the cost, schedule, and space allocation must be reviewed.
The example above is for one type of separating comma.
In a future issue of NOAA's NWS Focus, we'll look at more
commas of separation: serial commas and those that separate
multiple adjectives.
In the meantime, when in doubt, look it up!
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| 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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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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