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NOAA's NWS Focus
August 25, 2003 |
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The National StormReady Advisory
Board gathered recently with staff members of Pacific
Region Headquarters and Hawaiian Congressional staffers,
Liane Ashikawa (staff to Representative Ed Case)
and Mike Kitamura, (District Director for Senator
Daniel Akaka) during the annual StormReady Advisory
Board meeting held at NWS Pacific Region Headquarters.
Pacific Region Director Jeff LaDouce and Liane Ashikawa
are holding the TsunamiReady sign, and Mike Kitamura
is standing at Ashikawa's left. Read more about the
meeting by
clicking here.
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Director's Dialog:
Corporate Board Membership?
Thanks
for the information presented recently in Focus about
the NWS Corporate Board. My question is, isn't the NWSEO represented
on this board?
Thanks again,
--David McGinnis,
Meteorologist, Key West, FL
Thanks
for your question.
Although NWSEO is
not on the NWS Corporate Board, the NWSEO President has an open
invitation to address the Board on matters of interest to the
union. NWS and NWSEO form the National Labor Council which functions
as a national problem-solving group and as a forum for pre-decisional
input on decisions affecting the workforce. For more information
on this Council, see Article 8 of the NWS-NWSEO Collective
Bargaining Agreement.
--John Jones, NWS
Deputy Director
Good
morning,
I read NOAA's NWS Focus this morning and couldn't help but
comment on the Director's Dialog column concerning "What is the
Corporate Board?"
I think the point needs to be made that a corporate board
of directors for a company that has several thousand employees
generally consists of members inside and outside the organization.
One reason for this is that "outside" members can be more open
about their opinions concerning the direction of the company
and are not afraid of being fired by the Chairman of the Board,
since they are usually not otherwise affiliated with the organization
on whose board they sit. Another reason is that members outside
of the organization many times see things a bit differently than
those on the inside and bring fresh ideas to the table. Unfortunately,
that isn't true with the NWS. The members of the NWS Corporate
Board all report to the Director in some fashion. Therefore,
how much candor can there really be?
It seems to me, the NWS would be well served to include members
from NOAA, academia, the private sector, FAA, etc., on the "corporate
board." The inclusion of members outside of the NWS would foster
fresh ideas from a different point of view which would only help
to make an excellent organization even better.
--Walt Felver,
Grand Rapids, MI
Thank
you for your question regarding Corporate Board membership. We
use the term "Corporate Board" because it is composed of agency
leadership, and is somewhat analogous to a private corporation's
board of directors. The board of directors in an organization
helps oversee the company and its management, and often is given
ultimate power to direct corporate operations. Like private industry,
our board focuses on the future and health of the agency, provides
corporate oversight, and strives to make decisions that position
our agency to thrive in today's changing environment.
Different laws govern
Federal agencies and corporations. Among these is the Federal
Advisory Committee Act (FACA), which prohibits us from including
private interests on our Board. FACA allows private interests
to only serve on advisory government committees. Because the
Corporate Board makes decisions, non-federal representatives
can not serve on our board. This FACA restriction is designed
to prevent outside groups from exerting undue influence in the
federal decision-making process.
While we cannot invite
these interests to sit as Corporate Board members, we actively
pursue their views and ideas by inviting them to meetings as
speakers and panelists. We place enormous value on the contributions
of our partners, and routinely bring representatives in to provide
the board with fresh ideas and views - complimentary or not.
A few recent guests include: John Snow, University of Oklahoma;
Jim Block, Meteorlogix; Kelly Redmond, Western Regional Climate
Center Desert Research Institute; Ron Miller, at the time Chief
Information Officer, Department of Homeland Security; John McLaughlin,
News Channel 8, Des Moines; and John Armstrong, Chair, National
Research Council Committee on Partnerships in Weather and Climate
Services (which produced Fair Weather: Effective Partnerships
in Weather and Climate Services). The August Board meeting
will include presentations from Peter Ewins, United Kingdom Meteorological
Office, and Pierre Dubreuil, Canadian Meteorological Service,
to review weather and climate service delivery in other countries.
In addition, we gather
public input through our strategic planning and requirements-gathering
processes. Federal partners, such as the FAA, sit on many of
our multi-agency decision-making councils, including the ASOS
and NEXRAD Program Management Councils, and work very closely
with our operational policymakers here at headquarters. The Office
of the Federal Coordinator for Meteorology (OFCM) also works
to bring federal agencies together for decision-making and discussion,
on topics such as lightning data requirements.
As a NOAA line office,
NWS shares a common vision and strategic plan with all of NOAA.
Part of the challenge is to effectively link NWS goals with the
overarching guidance NOAA gives us. The matrix management approach
implemented by Admiral Lautenbacher has us participating with
our counterparts in other NOAA line offices on teams addressing
cross-cutting issues. While there are no NOAA members on the
NWS Corporate Board, NOAA guests have also addressed the board,
and one of the Board's committees, the Science and Technology
Committee, includes members from NESDIS and OAR.
--John Jones, NWS
Deputy Director
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AMS Meeting to
Feature NOAA-Wide Exhibit
A new approach to exhibiting
at the American Meteorological Society's annual meeting will
bring the NWS and all NOAA line offices together into one large
exhibit.
The 84th annual
meeting of the American
Meteorological Society (AMS) is set for January 11-15, 2004,
in Seattle, WA. Traditionally, the NWS is the biggest NOAA exhibitor
at the conference, with other NOAA line offices and labs building
and staffing individual booths in the AMS exhibit hall. For the
first time, to support Admiral Lautenbacher's efforts to unite
NOAA, the NWS will lead and participate in a NOAA-wide exhibit
based around the themes and goals of the NOAA
Strategic Plan.
"The AMS meeting and
exhibit hall gives NOAA an opportunity to showcase organizational
goals and priorities," said Randee Exler, Director of the NWS
Communications Office, who is leading this effort for the NWS
and NOAA. "The exhibit will allow all of NOAA, including the
National Marine Fisheries Service and the National Ocean Service,
to reach out to an audience that is highly interested in and
attuned to environmental topics."
As part of its program
review earlier this year, NOAA established four goals in the
areas of: ecosystems management; climate; weather and water;
and commerce and transportation. These four program areas are
now part of a matrix management framework, where organizational
goals are shared by all six NOAA line offices.
By working together,
this new NOAA exhibit can travel to other shows and meetings
throughout the year and introduce new audiences to the full scope
of NOAA's important mission. For example, the exhibit structure
will stay in Seattle for the American
Association for the Advancement of Science annual meeting
in February 2004.
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Updated List Covers
New NWS Directives
In the last month, eleven
new NWS directives have been posted, including directives on topics
such as river forecasts. Revisions to several directives, including
10-8 Aviation Weather Services and 10-9 Hydrologic Services Program,
have also been posted.
Bookmark the following link and check back regularly for new
and updated NWS Directives.
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Hawaii Congressional
Delegation Staff Briefed on Benefits of Storm/TsunamiReady
at National Advisory Board Meeting
The NWS National StormReady
Advisory Board held its annual meeting at Pacific Region Headquarters
in Honolulu, August 12-14, 2003. The Board meets in person each
year to discuss key program issues, improve program policies,
and review program accomplishments over the past year.
"This year's Board
meeting was a great success," said Steve Kuhl, National Warning
Coordination Meteorologist (WCM) Program Manager. "The Board
addressed some important issues that were raised by our field
WCMs. Ideas on how to increase program visibility and better
serve our emergency management partners were discussed." Kuhl
said the Board will be forming several issue teams, to consider,
for example, developing some new StormReady/TsunamiReady marketing
tools including printed materials and presentation aids, and
to study StormReady designation standards.
As part of this year's
meeting, the Board met with staff members from the offices of
Senator Daniel Akaka and Congressman Ed Case, and Jeff LaDouce,
Pacific Region Director, briefed the staff on the benefits of
Storm/TsunamiReady.
"It was very beneficial
to have the Congressional staff visit us at Pacific Region Headquarters,
and explain to them the benefits of the StormReady and TsunamiReady
program," said LaDouce. "We strongly support the program in the
Pacific and hope that it will continue to grow throughout our
region."
The briefing was followed
by a tour of the Richard H. Hagemeyer Pacific Tsunami Warning
Center, to educate the Congressional staff and StormReady Board
on the important role the center plays in issuing tsunami warnings
throughout much of the Pacific.
The National StormReady
Advisory Board includes:
National WCM Program
Manager Steve Kuhl; National WCM Program Manager Assistant Donna
Franklin; Regional WCMs Joel Cline, Pacific Region; Aimee Devaris,
Alaska Region; Jeff Lorens, Western Region; Walt Zaleski, Southern
Region; Jim Keeney, Central Region; Rick Watling, Eastern Region
(Rich Kane, WCM at the Pittsburgh, PA, Weather Forecast Office
represented Eastern Region at this meeting); International Association
of Emergency Managers (IAEM) representative Bob Goldhammer; and
National Emergency Management Association (NEMA) representative
Dave Liebersbach.
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Service Hydrologist
Gives Conference Talk On Great Flood of 1993
An NWS expert was a guest
speaker at the Iowa
U.S. Geological Survey District conference commemorating the
10-year anniversary of the Great Midwest Flood of 1993.
Jeff Zogg, the Service Hydrologist for the NWS Quad
Cities, Iowa/Illinois (Davenport, IA), Weather
Forecast Office, discussed meteorological and hydrologic
conditions leading up to the flood; the meteorological
and hydrologic conditions during the flood; and
what the NWS has done differently since the 1993
great flood.
"One key component
of what we've done since the Great Flood of 1993 was develop
and implement the Advanced
Hydrologic Prediction Service (AHPS)," Zogg told the audience.
The conference was
held in Coralville, IA, near Iowa City, where the Iowa River
at Iowa City reached its second highest level ever, and water
levels at Coralville Reservoir, about nine miles upstream from
Iowa City, peaked at the highest level recorded since the reservoir
was completed in 1958. That level was five feet above the elevation
of the emergency spillway. This was the only time in the reservoir's
history the spillway had been topped. Water went over the spillway
for 26 consecutive days.
Zogg invited the conference
attendees to an upcoming
AHPS users' workshop NWS is hosting August 28, 2003, in Davenport,
IA.
Other local and federal
officials spoke about new technology, new procedures, and other
changes in flood-warning systems and mitigation that have come
about in the past 10 years, as well as challenges that still
lie ahead. The public, as well as local, state, and federal officials,
were also invited to attend.
Area political figures
were involved as well. Staff representatives for U.S. Representative
Jim Leach and U.S. Senator Tom Harkin also spoke at the conference.
"This conference provided
great interaction between the NWS and its users, and it provided
excellent visibility for the NWS too," Zogg said.
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Also On the Web...Federal
Agencies, Research Community to Develop Weather Research and
Forecasting System
NOAA and the National
Center for Atmospheric Research will partner with the U.S. Air
Force, the U.S. Navy, and the Federal Aviation Administration
to develop a new weather forecast system for the research and
operational forecasting communities. The new development, called
the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF pronounced "wharf")
system, is the result of a landmark cooperative effort among
scientists at partnering public and private agencies. Read the NOAA
news story here.
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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 AccessNOAA
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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
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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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