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NOAA's NWS Focus November
25, 2002 |
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| Charles
D. De Rienzo, Superintendent of the New York Port Authority Police Department
(PAPD), Andrea Bair, NWS Western Region Climate Program Manager; and Joseph
Morris, PAPD Chief of Police, stand in front of a memorial
quilt made to honor the 37 PAPD officers and 1 K-9 officer killed in
the line-of-duty on September 11, 2001. Bair and Karen St. Clair, Budget
Officer also from Western Region, worked with a small group of women from around the country
to create the quilt. The quilt will be displayed permanently at the PAPD
Headquarters in Jersey City, NJ.
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| Take
a look at other NWS news, as submitted for the NOAA
Weekly Report.
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Click
here to take a look at NOAA-wide
employee news, as posted in the latest issue of Access
NOAA.
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| Editors'
Note:
Getting Your Story In Focus: Start By Recognizing
Elements of a News Article
For those who want to learn a little more about successful
news writing, take a minute to read a short Washington
Post newspaper article that explains how a news
story is written. From the experience of journalism graduates
who have had a lot of this kind of training, this brief
article, written for a feature called the "Kids Post," is
easily one of the best explanations of the kind of writing
we try to give you in every NOAA's NWS Focus article.
If you plan to submit a news item for NOAA's NWS Focus, this is a good guide to follow.
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| Working
Together to Save Lives:
Partners Use Grant to Establish New Weather Radio Transmitter
For Upstate New York Finger Lakes Region
A new 1000-watt NOAA Weather Radio (NWR) transmitter was
officially given to the National Weather Service by the
City of Ithaca Fire Department in a ceremony
November 15, 2002. The Ithaca Fire Department obtained grant
money from the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Rural Utilities
Service NOAA Weather Radio Grant Program, which provided
funding for the new transmitter.
The Park School of Communications at Ithaca College provided
tower space for the transmitter on the campus radio station's
tower. The project was a joint effort between the City of
Ithaca Fire Department, Ithaca College, Tompkins County
Emergency Management and the NWS Weather Forecast Office
(WFO) in Binghamton.
"The new NWR station fills a critical gap in NOAA weather
radio coverage in Ithaca, NY, which boasts a large student
population from Cornell University and Ithaca College,"
said David Nicosia, WCM, NWS Binghamton. "The transmitter now provides NOAA weather radio
coverage for the Finger Lakes, which on a typical summer
day can have thousands of recreational boaters."
Brian Wilbur, Chief of the Ithaca Fire Department, said
the effort to obtain an NWR transmitter had strong community
support, especially among various boater organizations,
the Coast Guard Auxiliary and the Town of Dryden Pre-Disaster
Mitigation Project leaders.
"There is no doubt that the warning alerts from this NOAA
Weather Radio transmitter will someday save lives in this
region!" said Chief Wilbur.
According to Craig Wulf of the RUS, about $3.7 million
of $5 million in NWR
grants have been distributed, and the RUS continues
to accept grant applications from communities seeking funding
for NWR transmitters. If you have questions concerning this
program, contact Craig Wulf, cwulf@rus.usda.gov,
or Orren E. Cameron, ecameron@rus.usda.gov.
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| AWIPS
To Gain Forecasting and Evaluation of Seas and Lakes
The NWS's Meteorological Development Laboratory (MDL)
is working on an operational software package that will integrate
marine information on AWIPS and assist coastal Weather Forecast
Office (WFO) and NCEP forecasters in their warning and forecast
decision making process.
The capability, called System on AWIPS for Forecasting
and Evaluation of SEas and LAkeS (SAFESEAS), will be based
on the System for Convection Analysis and Nowcasting (SCAN)
approach, which provides forecasters with decision assistance
for severe weather warnings and forecasts.
"SAFESEAS is a decision-assistance application that will
provide NWS forecasters the capability to monitor marine
observations and alerts of potentially hazardous marine
warning conditions," said Therese Pierce, Chief of the Marine
and Coastal Weather Services Branch in the Office of Climate,
Water, and Weather Services. "This will help forecasters
alert mariners and coastal residents earlier to severe marine
weather and increase their margin of safety."
Initially, SAFESEAS will provide a meteorological watch
function, monitoring marine data and alerting the forecaster
when various parameters (e.g., wind, wave, and visibility)
are exceeded. Eventually, SAFESEAS will integrate marine
information into a decision-assistance architecture. According
to Stephan Smith, chief of MDL's Decision Assistance Branch,
SAFESEAS will also "provide a conduit into operations for
new science and applied techniques related to marine warnings
and forecasts developed by NOAA and university researchers."
The software testing starts in December at WFOs Boston,
MA; Oxnard, CA; Mobile, AL; and Detroit, MI. If testing
is successful, the rollout to coastal WFOs is planned for
Operational Build 3, scheduled for late fall 2003.
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| Oregon
Outreach Effort Connects With 3,000 Science Educators
Eight NOAA staff from the Portland, OR, area represented
the agency during the National Science Teachers Association
Area Convention November 14-16, 2002. The annual convention
drew more than 3,000 educators, administrators and exhibitors
from around the country.
NOAA was one of several state and Federal government agencies
armed with handbooks, web site information and technical
experts to answer questions posed by educators. Representing
NOAA was staff from NWS and NOAA's National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS).
Tyree Wilde, Warning Coordination
Meteorologist from the NWS Weather Forecast Office (WFO)
in Portland said he quickly learned that the educators felt
NOAA was a tremendous resource for their own professional
education as well as their students.
"I heard repeatedly how teachers and students have our
NOAA.gov web site bookmarked,"
Wilde said. "They continue to visit these websites for the
most current information on subjects such as the status
of El Niño, or the weather in their local area. The
teachers said their students access NOAA information for
research projects every day and thanked us for the value
we provide them. It made me proud to work here."
One highlight of the NOAA exhibit was an interactive lightning
quiz. After successfully completing the short quiz, educators
became eligible to win a new NOAA Weather Radio receiver
for their school.
Sharon Aaron works in NOAA's Office of Public and Constituent
Affairs' Correspondence Unit in Washington, DC. Part of
her duties includes preparing responses to educators and
citizen who contact NOAA and ask for various materials about
the agency. As a first-time attendee during the NSTA Portland
convention, Aaron learned first-hand which NOAA materials
educators use in their classroom and to gain a better understanding
of how teachers value access to government resources online
and through printed brochures. She shipped thousands of
pounds of printed materials to Portland and saw the piles
of brochures diminish from the tables within a few minutes.
"Attending this program provided me with a better insight
into how I can serve our NOAA customers," Aaron said. "I
want to go to another NSTA program because now I know that
teachers need and want our information."
The NOAA and NWS staff at the convention heard many educators
say they liked the El Niño information because it
is a topical issue now. Some educators noted that they find
NOAA and NWS web pages they want to use, but many of the
page layouts make it impossible to print the contents to
fit on a standard 8 ½ x 11 sheet of paper.
Additional NOAA staff included Andy Bryant, Jack Bohl and
John Saltenberger from WFO Portland as well as WR Public
Affairs Officer Marilu Trainor, and Patricia Vandetta, Allyson
Ouzts, Jeff Lockwood, and Scott Rumsey from NOAA's National
Marine Fisheries Service.
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| Also
On the Web...Official Photos Available for NWS Offices
NWS offices seeking official photos of senior leaders for
display have a new outlet for acquiring digital images of
the NWS Director, NOAA Administrator, Commerce Secretary,
and President. The NWS Communications Office has added scanned
images of the "chain of command." Images are available in
two formats for printing.
To download the images to your computer for printing, right
click with your computer mouse on the links below and save.
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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
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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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