| NOAA's NWS Focus -
August 12, 2002
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| Left to right:
Jack Kelly, NWS Director, Vicki Nadolski, Western
Region Director, and Bob Nester, IMET from WFO Missoula,
MT, prepare to board a helicopter to fly over the
Monument-Malhem Complex fire in the Malheur National
Forest, 9 miles southwest of Unity, OR. Read
all about it by following this link. |
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| Click
here to take a look
at other NWS news, as submitted in the August 8, 2002, NWS
input to 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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Fire Tour Gives Relevance to Theme of Working Together to Save
Lives
Editors’ Note: NWS Director Jack Kelly recently visited
the National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC) in Idaho and the site
of a large wildfire in Oregon.
By Jack Kelly, NWS Director
During my recent visit out West, I saw our fire weather team
in action providing support to wildland firefighting efforts.
I was impressed with the commitment, dedication, and willingness
of our employees to serve our partners and customers.
The level of service and excellence extended beyond our Incident
Meteorologists (IMETs) on site. Our forecast offices do a great
job providing forecasts and information to support firefighting
efforts.
We’re starting the peak of wildfire season, and this year,
to date, has been a record-breaker. Approximately 53,000 fires
have burned 4.25 million acres nationally, which more than doubles
the previous 10-year average of 2 million acres, and far surpasses
the previous record-setting fire season of 2000 when about 61,000
fires burned 3.55 million acres by August 1.
We have responded to 117 IMET dispatch requests and our IMETs
have logged more than 11,500 hours of support. We have met every
request for IMET support, and I appreciate how the forecast office
staffs cover for each other and cope with the strain these fires
put on daily operations.
I was struck by how much the weather influences decision-making
by the incident commander and the operations manager. Visiting
the site of a large fire in east central Oregon, the Malheur complex,
and seeing first-hand the teamwork of Federal, state, and local
agencies, reminded me just how important accurate weather forecasts
are to this operation. I gained a level of respect for the hard
manual labor and back-breaking work that goes into the fight to
protect our Nation’s resources from these fires.
The fire camp reminded me of a military operation. The camp was
organized and everyone knew their mission and their individual
role as well as their role as part of the larger team in meeting
the overall goal to contain the fire and protect lives and property.
Fire camps are usually in remote locations where electricity is
supplied by diesel generators and there is no indoor plumbing.
Fresh water and supplies are trucked in daily, while garbage and
gray water are trucked out. Fire camps are hot, dusty, and smokey
unless it rains; then its muddy and cold.
At the camp, NWS staff demonstrated our new Air Transportable
Mobile Units (ATMUs) with FX-NET. The AWIPS-like functions and
two-way satellite communications capabilities of the All Hazards
Onsite Meteorological Support System promise to help our IMETS
better prepare their forecasts and access data to help identify
short-term and long-term weather changes. FX-NET was the technological
envy of the fire camp.
We should be proud of the teamwork that helps control wildland
fires. Several firefighters told me that the information our employees
provide does more than help planners get fires under control faster;
the information also saves firefighters’ lives. Our fire-fighting
partners appreciate all of our support, from NOAA’s satellite
imagery, Climate Prediction Center seasonal outlooks, and Storm
Prediction Center two-day outlooks to WFO support, staff support
at NIFC, and IMET support in the field.
These efforts show we are committed to working together to save
lives.
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| NWS Corporate
Board News: June Meeting Results in Reorganization and New Executive
Secretary
The NWS Corporate Board voted at the June board meeting to reorganize
its functions, and create an Executive Secretariat position to
monitor progress and assist the board in achieving success.
The Board, a group whose functions are similar to those of a
board of directors in a corporation, is comprised of the NWS Director
and Deputy Director as well as the Regional and Office Directors,
the Chief Financial Officer, Chief Information Officer, and the
Director of Strategic Planning and Policy.
"The Board changed from a quarterly to a semi-annual meeting
schedule," said John E. Jones, Jr., NWS Deputy Director.
"With the recent changes, more of the Board’s business
will be conducted by four
smaller topical committees," he said. The committees
are: Operations; Science and Technology; Workforce/Human Capital;
and Finance and Investment Review. The Board’s Executive
Committee has oversight of the four committees and has final approval
authority for all committee decisions.
“Essentially, all decisions are now made in committees
empowered by the Board,” said Jones. “Not all decisions
must be made by the full Board. Decisions that can not be resolved
within the working committee can be elevated to the Executive
Committee for resolution. This will help to free the Board for
more visionary/strategic effort.”
The Board also created a new senior staff position. Joanne Swanson
is the Board’s new Executive Secretary. Swanson recently
returned to NWS Headquarters from a detail as the NWS Liaison
with the Program Coordination Office at NOAA Headquarters.
“The Executive Secretary’s role is to serve as the
‘conscience’ of the Board, monitoring progress, closing
actions, attending all meetings, assisting in the development
of full Board agendas, and facilitating communication,”
said Swanson. “One of my goals is to improve the flow of
information from the Board to employees.” Swanson’s
duties also include recording and distributing decisions, actions
and discussions, managing logistics for routine meetings, overseeing
vendor contracts, and posting logistics and meeting materials
to the Board’s website.
As her first action, Swanson completed the Corporate Board handbook
that outlines procedures for operations, organization, and business
approach. The Handbook is available on the Corporate
Board's website.
“Our goal is to improve the Board’s efficiency and
better communicate Board activities to our employees,” said
Jones. Look for future NOAA's NWS Focus stories
on issues identified at the meeting.”
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NOAA
Employee of the Month for August is Southern Region Innovator
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Paul Kirkwood, chief of the Dissemination Enhancement Team for
NWS Southern Region Headquarters in Fort Worth, TX, is NOAA’s
Employee of the Month for August.
Kirkwood was cited for his outstanding, innovative work in developing
and implementing software designed to capitalize on the NWS’s
powerful new Advanced Weather Interactive Processing System (AWIPS)
and the associated Interactive Forecast Preparation System (IFPS).
“Paul is an example of how the initiative and contribution
of just one person can make a significant difference,” said
Bill Proenza, Director, NWS Southern Region. “His software
development within AWIPS, and its compatibility with the highly-acclaimed
Weather Event Simulator, makes this excellent training tool even
more valuable. His achievement provides all NWS field offices
with a true weather event archiver that will greatly benefit training
and performance.”
Kirkwood developed a unique system for archiving critical Doppler
radar system (WSR-88D) data. A valuable functional support tool
for AWIPS, the new system is also compatible with the Weather
Event Simulator. Its ability to absorb a full range of meteorological
data, including surface and upper air observations, radar and
model data – helps solve a critical training need.
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| Donna
and Craig Vie for Speech Technology Award
They only began to hit the airwaves a few months ago, but the
voices of “Donna” and “Craig,” heard by
millions of listeners on more than 720 NOAA Weather Radio (NWR)
broadcast stations, are already being recognized for helping to
communicate potentially life saving weather information.
The recognition is an award nomination for the National Weather
Service’s use of Speechworks text-to-speech technology in
the latest generation of NWR synthesized voice broadcasts.
Speech Technology Magazine is sponsoring the Second
Annual Speech Solutions Awards to recognize “the individuals
and companies whose efforts have propelled the industry forward.”
Automating NWR transmissions with text-to-speech technology has
enabled the NWS to issue multiple independent warnings over multiple
transmitters simultaneously, allowing speedier delivery of severe
weather warnings and more lead time for the public. Local forecast
offices fine-tune the voices to correctly pronounce geographically-specific
names.
Anyone can cast a vote on the Speech Technology Magazine
website at http://www.speechtechmag.com/submissions/awards2002.html.
The Speechworks/NWS award category is “Best TTS Solution/Telephony.”
The magazine will honor award winners at the SpeechTEK 2002 conference
in late October in New York City.
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Forecast
Office Earns Award for Health and Safety Excellence
The Los Angeles/Oxnard, CA, Weather Forecast Office (WFO) received
the NOAA “Best of the Best” Award for Excellence in
Environmental Compliance, Health, and Safety on August 1, 2002.
The award was presented during the annual NOAA Environmental,
Health, and Safety Conference (http://www.ecs.noaa.gov/)
held in Silver Spring, MD. DOC and NOAA personnel attended the
conference to discuss various issues including FY02 environmental
and safety program status, budget, policies, and FY03 program
development.
The award recognizes the NOAA facility or site that demonstrates
environmental, health, and safety excellence at the highest level.
Russell Bacon, the WFO Los Angeles/Oxnard environmental focal
point, accepted the award for the office.
"Local management made the environmental, safety, and health
programs a priority, investing financial and human resources to
insure the programs were setup and run properly,” said Todd
Morris, Meteorologist-In-Charge of the Los Angeles/Oxnard, CA,
WFO. "Without the dedication of Russell Bacon and the team
effort by the entire staff the programs would not have been a
success."
Follow this link to see a picture
of the award presentation.
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NWS Helps Rescue African Upper Air Data
NWS is helping meteorological services in African developing
countries convert paper records of upper air data into a digital
format to permanently archive weather information. The project
may also include surface data if funding permits.
The African Desk of the NWS’s Climate Prediction Center
participated in the pilot project to save African upper air data
during a trip to Senegal, Niger, and Mozambique from July 8-24,
2002.
“The data recovered by this project will help the NWS with
reanalysis and validation of its numerical models,” said
Wassila Thiaw, African Desk Coordinator. “This involves
running past model scenarios and comparing the output to actual
observations to see if the results of the model are realistic
or accurate.”
Countries participating in the pilot project also include Angola,
Kenya, Malawi, and Zambia. Each country received equipment to
photograph the paper records and copy the photographs to a CD-ROM.
The CDs are mailed to the United States, where a contractor will
key the information into a data base. The NWS is donating the
project equipment to the participating countries to help develop
their archiving systems. The data will ultimately be archived
at the National Climatic Data Center and made available to the
scientific community.
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Some Thrift Savings Plan Functions Temporarily Unavailable in
August During Changeover
Conversion to the new record-keeping system will limit or delay
some Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) services between mid-August and
mid-September. Interfund transfer requests will have to be submitted
on paper from August 16 through September 15; electronic transfer
requests won’t be available during that time. Contribution
allocations and electronic requests for Personal Identification
Numbers (PINs) will not be accepted between August 31 and September
15, 2002. Paper requests for PINs received during that time will
be held for processing on September 16.
The new TSP record-keeping system will be online September 16,
2002. The new system will allow for daily valuation of accounts
and daily processing of transactions. Following the changes, the
TSP also will report account balances in terms of shares as well
as dollars; offer a greater number of withdrawal options; and
provide on-line service via the Internet for loans and withdrawals,
according to information on the TSP
website.
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Also On the Web...Survey Says Managers Need Timely Financial Data
Government managers don’t have access to timely financial
data and it hinders their ability to improve performance and measure
costs, according to the results of a recent survey of more than
800 senior executives and managers in government. Results of the
survey, conducted jointly by Government Executive magazine and
the Association of Government Accountants, are highlighted in
a July Government
Executive magazine article. Included in the article
are comments by one of the designers of the survey, NWS Chief
Financial Officer/Chief Administrative Officer Ted David.
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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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