| NOAA's NWS Focus -
September 9, 2002
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here to take a look
at other NWS news, as submitted in the September 5, 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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Leadership Handbook Available
A handbook of information and ideas for NWS leaders is available
to all employees from NWS Eastern Region Headquarters (ERH).
The handbook is arranged in two parts. “Understanding Leadership,”
helps relate leadership to the NWS and the organization’s
goals. “What You as a Leader Can Do Now,” identifies
actions leaders can take for self improvement, and for improving
personal relations with staff, customers, and across the organization.
The idea for the handbook was an outgrowth of one of the sessions
at the Eastern Region’s Management Workshop held in Atlanta,
GA, in November 2001, said Tom Baumgardner, Hydrologist-In-Charge
of the Middle Atlantic River Forecast Center, State College, PA.
Baumgardner led a breakout session at the Atlanta meeting on “How
to Successfully Lead a WFO/CWSU/RFC.”
The group, consisting of six managers (Bob Bell, Steve Harned,
Tom Kriehn, Bernie Palmer, Bob Thompson, and Al Wheeler) and NWS
Eastern Region Director Dean Gulezian, brainstormed the topic
and settled on a handbook format. The concepts in the handbook
are drawn from the team’s variety of experiences and training.
After the Atlanta workshop, the team further defined the makeup
of the handbook and then put together the pieces. After Rosemary
Auld Miller from ERH Scientific Services, edited and reformatted
the handbook it was distributed to all Corporate Board members
for redistribution. To
read and download a copy (in Adobe Acrobat format), click here.
Baumgardner said the project was a learning experience for the
team.
“First, we expanded our concept of leadership to include
actions we take to build our own leadership characteristics, actions
with the staff, actions to benefit the organization, and actions
to support the customers we serve. Second, we saw that by working
effectively as a group, ‘the whole was greater than the
sum of its parts.’ We built on each other’s contributions
to develop something we could all be proud of.”
According to Eastern Region Director Dean Gulezian, the leadership
handbook was part of a continuing effort to improve the leadership
skills of Eastern Region managers and supervisors. Other efforts
at previous workshops included having round-table discussions
on leadership and bringing outside speakers to discuss leadership
topics.
Donna Layton, the course director for the NWS’s Executive
Leadership Seminar, said in an e-mail to the handbook developers
that the Leadership Handbook captures a variety of leadership
wisdom, combined with practical application advice that has “unlimited
potential to improve NWS.” Layton added that she is already
learning from and using the handbook. "I salute all of you!”
she said in her note. “The effort put into the handbook
and the quality of what you produced is outstanding...You are
keeping the leadership momentum alive and well!”
NWS Director Jack Kelly, in an e-mail to Gulezian, stated “Thanks
for sending me a copy of the book. This great idea shows you have
our field leaders thinking about leadership. Good show by all.”
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Letters
to the Editor: Wrap Up of Feedback on "Sociologist Studies Meteorologists"
Article
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Editors’ Note: Following are the final three letters
submitted to NOAA's NWS Focus after the August
19 article highlighting a paper by Gary Alan Fine. Two letters
ran in the August
26 issue. Thanks to everyone who submitted their opinions.
I would be interested to hear what the Corporate Board
thought of Professor Gary Fine's presentation. Especially where
he seems to question the "...surprising organization of the
National Weather Service into semi-autonomous ‘regions’..."
In light of the recent proposals for NCEP to handle much of the
longer range forecasts, and the WFOs to deal only in the short
range forecasts, it would appear there will be little future need
for this type of organizational structure.
Bob Pifer
WFO Miami, FL
Alan Fine's paper on the sociological aspects of operational
weather forecasting was well written and somewhat provocative.
Limited as his scope was, the author did have an accurate assessment
of operational weather forecasting.
His prediction of the National Weather Service in the future
is accurate, as we have left behind the good old days of weather
forecasting and being public servants, and are now focusing
on a different service group that is dictated by political direction,
which is problematic at best.
Our service to the public is no longer the primary focus and
this is a dangerous direction. The NWS is in the middle of culture
change and its members are in the midst of finding the balance
between what was and what is. Gone are the days when Integrity,
Professionalism, Loyalty, and Public Service meant something.
A moral issue to say the least, is the move away from these
values which made the National Weather Service the great organization
that it was. We must do our utmost to keep these values with
us as we move further into the 21st century. We need to educate
our customers about what we do and what services are available
to them. In doing so, we can better fit their needs which will
result in a more efficient service and a higher customer satisfaction
rating.
The most valuable resource that the National Weather Service
has is its employees. This resource needs to be treated fairly,
without regard to race, religion, gender, and age. Human Relations
must be just as important to the agency's mission as issuing
warnings and forecasts. It should be reemphasized that it’s
at the field offices that the NWS proves its worth and management
should support the field offices, instead of the other way around.
David Swallow
WFO Austin/San Antonio TX
Dr. Fine's article is a superb sociological overview of our
organization and raises several valid observations. His last
sentence is especially important, though easily overlooked,
that our science is ultimately grounded in human relations.
As a retired military person with extensive program management
experience with the private sector, and a current and long-time
successful businessman; I encourage all of us, and especially
our leaders to keep his observations in mind and how we can
improve the organization.
Bill Nichols
WFO Davenport, IA
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| NWS
Launches New Distance Learning Aviation Course
In late September, NWS will launch a pilot version of a Distance
Learning Aviation Course (DLAC). This “blended learning”
course features a combination of web-based modules and teletraining,
according to the NWS Training Office. Aviation Focal Points at
NWS Weather Forecast Offices (WFOs) will initially be encouraged
to take the course. Based on reviews of this course from students,
a revised version of DLAC will be ready for a general offering
in the second quarter of FY 03 to all WFO forecasters. The DLAC
course was developed by the NWS/Cooperative Program for Operational
Meteorology, Education, and Training (COMET). For more information
contact Eli Jacks at Elliott.Jacks@noaa.gov.
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WFO "Science
Team" Concludes Successful Year of Problem Solving
Fifteenth century author and poet Robert Green once quipped “Time
nor tide waits for no man.” Had he been born a few hundred
years later, he might have added “technology” to his
famous quote. One NWS Weather Forecast Office (WFO) has developed
a strategy for keeping up with advancing technology.
With a steady flow of new data, new systems, and changing procedures,
employees often find themselves pushing to stay on top of new
developments and working hard to avoid being left behind. Under
the direction of WFO Little Rock, AR, Meteorologist-In-Charge
Renee Fair, the office last year developed a special Science Team
comprised of talented volunteers from both the technical and operational
side of the office.
Team members meet monthly to apply crossover expertise to resolve
technological or related problems, Fair said. They also serve
as a quick response mechanism for more immediate concerns. Created
in September 2001, the team operates under the direct supervision
of Information Technology Officer (ITO) Dan Koch. Whenever a problem
or concern develops, staffers are encouraged to bring it to the
ITO for a quick resolution.
Fair says the team approach definitely works.
“We have so many talented people in this office,”
said Fair. “Bringing all that talent together as a team
has resulted in better communication, better coordination, and
a dramatic improvement in our ability to resolve problems quickly.”
According to Newton Skiles, the Interactive Forecast Preparation
System Focal Point, “We have meetings about once a month
and deal with all facets of operations. It has been very helpful
in handling problems as they arise in a prompt and efficient manner.
We work well together.”
Computer model enhancements, interactive programs, and all of
the problems inherent in learning and using the latest data gathering
and forecasting tools–continues to set a fast pace for WFOs
across the Nation.
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New Federal Travel Rates Available
New per diem travel rates from the General Services Administration
(GSA) are available in the August
30, 2002, Federal Register.
The rates take effect October 1, 2002. According to the GSA document,
the FY 2002 standard CONUS per diem rate and all other per diem
lodging rates remain unchanged through September 30, 2003. GSA
added 13 new destinations to the per diem listing.
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Also On
the Web...Navigations, NOAA's Employee Worklife Center
Newsletter
The August
issue of Navigations, produced by the NOAA
Employee Worklife Center, has articles on how to prepare for a
mid-career transition, information about the latest trend in business
travel, and more worklife-related information.
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