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NOAA's NWS Focus
December
9, 2002 |
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| David Viera (left), student
photographer, presents photographs of some of
the observation equipment now being used at
a newly dedicated Hunts Point, NY, weather station
to NOAA Administrator Vice Adm. Conrad C. Lautenbacher,
and NWS Director Jack Kelly. Read the full story
by following this
link.
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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 AccessNOAA
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| NY Weather Station Created to Stimulate Student Interest in Science
NWS's newest weather sensors are part of a new "Environmental
Discovery Center" dedicated
in Hunts Point, NY, December 6, 2002. The new
weather station at Hunts Point, NY, (also known as "The
Point" in Bronx, NY) was created through a public/private
partnership with the Hunts Point community and educators
from the Bronx Community College.
"This dedication
ceremony represents what might be called a dream come true
- that is to link education, weather observations, and improved
weather forecasts for the Bronx," noted NWS Director
Jack Kelly. "We are here to dedicate the achievement
of installing this new equipment and the potential for success
in educating the young people of Hunts Point about the wonders
of science."
NWS's Mike Wyllie,
Meteorologist-In-Charge of the Upton, NY, Weather Forecast
Office (WFO) worked closely with the Hunts Point community
to bring this plan to life. The Point is a non-profit organization
dedicated to youth development and the cultural and economic
revitalization of the Hunts Point section of the South Bronx.
The Point's mission is to stimulate culture and enterprise
through self-investment by its residents, especially its
youth.
"The Hunts
Point Weather Station, with its new Environmental Discovery
Center, will be an excellent educational tool for the residents
of the South Bronx, providing all students an opportunity
to become interested in meteorology and environmental science,"
said Wyllie.
The new Environmental
Discovery Center will provide more than standard weather
observations; it will also measure environmental factors
that affect the community. The center includes instruments
to monitor carbon monoxide and ozone levels allowing for
air quality research to be conducted.
WFO Upton will
have direct access to the new station, which will fill a
gap between observations made at Central Park and LaGuardia
Airport.
According to
Wyllie, the new center also has a web camera to allow NWS
forecasters and teachers in classrooms across the Bronx
to see weather that's approaching. In addition, NWS also
constructed a new weather computer lab to allow students
to access local data to simultaneously work on projects.
"We aren't
just installing equipment here, the NWS is working with
the Bronx Community College, local high schools, and other
members of the community to help students in the Bronx learn
about science and weather," Kelly said.
Guests attending
the ceremony included Congressman Jose Serrano and Vice
Adm. Conrad C. Lautenbacher, Jr., U.S. Navy (Ret.), Undersecretary
of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere and NOAA Administrator.
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NOAA,
NWS, and Weather Radio Highlighted in Warning Discussion
on MSNBC
NOAA, the NWS, and NOAA Weather Radio got exposure on an
MSNBC television program on December 3, 2002. Among the
guests on a 5 p.m. (ET) show hosted by Jerry Nachman were
Peter Ward, who heads the group Partnership for Public Warning,
and Steven Kuhr the head of a security company based in
New York.
Ward and Kuhr
praised the NOAA Weather Radio network's alerting capabilities
and pointed out that the NWS issues more warnings than all
other Federal government agencies combined. Text of the
discussion begins about halfway through the following transcript
on the MSNBC
homepage.
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Science
on a Sphere Debuts at NOAA Science Center
Have you ever wanted to have a bird's-eye view of the Earth's
changing weather patterns, or see lights twinkling from
cities all around the globe? Science
On a Sphere is an educational exhibit featuring
a giant opaque sphere with computer-generated images projected
onto it, giving the appearance that it is the earth, sun,
moon, or any other celestial body. Data and imagery come
from environmental satellites, output from computer models
of the atmosphere, and data on land-surface and ocean-bottom
topography. The new exhibit was unveiled on December 2 at
the NOAA Science Center in Silver Spring, MD.
Science On A
Sphere is the brainchild of Alexander (Sandy) MacDonald,
Director of the NOAA's
Forecast Systems Laboratory in Boulder, CO.
"We think
NOAA Science On a Sphere will be an invaluable educational
tool," said MacDonald. "It is a unique way to
explain complex information using images. It can be used
to illustrate geography, weather, climate, space weather
and a host of other kinds of data. It's limited only by
our imagination."
The exhibit
provides a unique and engaging way of looking at the earth
in its "native format," rather than as a distorted
flat representation, and will help communicate NOAA science
to the public, foster science education, and aid scientific
visualization.
The 68-inch
fiberglass sphere is suspended from a custom structure.
Four 3,000-lumen projectors and four personal computers
synchronize and blend the animated images from global environmental
data sets. Images include land and ocean topography, weather
events, weather prediction models, and past and future climate
change. For example, viewers can watch how the warm water
in the Pacific that signals an El Niño travels across
the ocean, or see five centuries of past climate change
as it affected the earth.
Science on a
Sphere will be at the American Meteorological Society's
annual meeting in Long Beach, CA, this February. Discussions
are underway to take Science on a Sphere to Capitol
Hill in March to highlight the President's Fiscal Year 2004
budget initiatives.
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| Natural
Hazard Statistical Summary for 2001 Now Online
In 2001, there were 464 weather-related fatalities, 8 less
than in 2000. Weather-related injuries also showed a slight
downward trend in 2001, dropping to 2,718 from 2,796 in
2000. In 2001, severe weather caused $11.8 billion in damages.
This is among the information available in NWS's newly-released
2001 U.S. Natural Hazard Statistics.
The annual publication
provides statistical information on fatalities, injuries,
and damage caused by weather-related hazards. The statistics
are collected by NWS forecast offices in the 50 states,
Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Virgin Islands, archived at NOAA's
National Climatic Data Center, and compiled by the NWS Office
of Climate, Water, and Weather Services, Program Performance
and Awareness Division. The 2001 statistics are available
online at: http://www.nws.noaa.gov/om/hazstats.shtml.
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Open
Season for Federal Long Term Care Insurance Closing Soon
Three weeks remain to apply for the new Federal Long-Term
Care Insurance program, which closes December 31, 2002.
For background
on plan options, a premium calculator to estimate payments
for coverage, and frequently asked questions and answers,
see the Office
of Personnel Management's LTC website.
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Also
On The Web...News Article Focuses on Diversity at Hurricane
Center
A recent Miami
Herald feature story focused on increasing
numbers of women and minorities in the field of meteorology,
using the National Hurricane Center as an example.
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