| NOAA's NWS Focus -
May 28, 2002
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Chris Kornkven,
Electronics Technician with WFO Milwaukee/Sullivan,
center, and Mike Woods, President of the National
Gulf War Resource Center, left, present an award to
H. Ross Perot at the 6th Annual Gulf War Conference.
Click
here for the story.
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Click
here to take a look
at other NWS news, as submitted in the May 23, 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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Editor's Note: Highlighting the Work of a Veteran
On Memorial Day we honor our Nation's veterans and the military
personnel who died in service to their country. In this edition
of NOAA's NWS Focus, we highlight a veteran within our ranks
who works diligently to save lives on the job and off, making our
corporate theme words to live by. His advocacy on behalf of veterans
health issues is admirable. We salute all NWS active duty and veteran
military personnel.
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Storm Prediction Center Joins Other Researchers In One of the Largest
U.S. Weather Studies
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NWS's Storm Prediction Center (SPC) is participating in one of
the largest U.S. weather studies ever conducted. The International
H2O Project (IHOP) 2002 is tracking the swaths of moisture that
fuel heavy rain across the southern Great Plains from Texas to
Kansas. Scientists hope that analyzing water vapor will yield
better predictions of when and where summertime storms will form
and how intense they will be. IHOP began on May 13 and runs through
June 23, 2002.
Led by the NOAA's National Severe Storms Laboratory and the National
Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), IHOP has a high-tech fleet
to collect air and ground data. Six aircraft from the United States
and Germany will traverse the core study area, some flying as
high as 56,000 feet. On the ground, an armada of 30 weather-tech
vehicles, including four Doppler radars on flatbed trucks, will
comb the rural roadways of Oklahoma, Kansas, and Texas. Over 100
scientists and technicians scattered across the plains will aim
radars and other sensors at water vapor well ahead of the day's
first raindrops.
On selected days, ten NWS field offices will fly radiosonde soundings
every 3 hours. More than 250 IHOP researchers will then study
the data and recommend means by which NWS might improve its quantitative
precipitation forecasts.
SPC is providing severe and hazardous weather guidance and scientific
expertise for the project. "IHOP provides the SPC opportunities
to evaluate new and experimental numerical weather prediction
models in detail, and test new hardware and software for possible
integration into SPC operations," said Russell Schneider,
Chief of SPC's Science Support Branch.
SPC forecasters will interact with leading scientists, researchers,
and forecasters from a variety of locations interested in operationally
relevant issues. SPC staff will also mentor three students from
the 2002 Oklahoma Weather Center Research Experiences for Undergraduates
(REU) program. The students will take an active role in IHOP activities
as a part of their studies.
"This is a unique opportunity for SPC forecasters to interact
personally and professionally with leading research specialists
while focusing on operationally critical forecast problems,"
said Schneider. "Rapid integration of this and other research
into NWS forecast operations promises to improve our forecasts
of thunderstorm initiation and potentially improve severe weather
forecast lead times."
More information on the study is available on the IHOP
home page.
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Length
of Marine Forecasts is Extended - This Story and More in the NWS
Weekly Report
On May 20, 2002, the NWS began providing more detailed and consistent
forecasts to mariners and other customers by reducing overlap
with the Atlantic high seas forecast area. Both the Atlantic and
Pacific offshore forecasts were extended from three to five days.
Read more about this and other news developments that make it
into the Weekly Report to NOAA by visiting the Communications
Office's Weekly Report page at http://www.nws.noaa.gov/com/weekly/index.htm.
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NOAA Announces Leadership Development Opportunity: Apply By June
21
NOAA is accepting applications for a career development initiative
that will help grow future senior leaders with agency-wide capabilities.
"Our ability to accomplish NOAA's mission is wholly dependent
upon the organization's most important asset -- its people,"
wrote Deputy Under Secretary Scott Gudes in a May 17, 2002, message
to employees announcing the Leadership Competencies Development
Program (LCDP). According to Gudes, LCDP will foster "an
environment that nurtures a shared understanding of our agency,
its mission, vision, as well as objectives. It will expand substantive
knowledge of NOAA's mission and strengthen communication in and
across NOAA."
John Jones, NWS Deputy Director, says "the LCDP grew out
of the individual line office leadership development programs,
so NWS will not conduct the Senior Leadership Potential Program
this year. The Corporate Board fully supports employee participation
in the NOAA-wide LCDP," he said. "There are four slots
allocated for NWS employees for this first class," said Jones.
"We encourage interested employees GS-13 to GS-15 to apply
for this unique career development and leadership opportunity."
The LCDP also does not substitute for nor compete with the courses
recently announced as part of the NWS Leadership Academy. In the
March 1 edition of NOAA's NWS Focus Greg Mandt, Director of the
Office of Climate, Water, and Weather Services at NWS Headquarters,
reported that the Leadership Academy is a collection of classes
offered in sequence to prepare people for greater responsibility
and management (click
here for the full story). LCDP, according to Donna
Layton, Training Division, NWS Office of Climate, Water, and Weather
Services, will help participants develop a larger NOAA perspective.
Effectively combining elements including Individual Development
Plans, formal training sessions, three to four career broadening
rotational assignments, and a formal mentoring program, LCDP takes
place over an 18-month period. Coupled with the NWS Leadership
Academy, LCDP offers another way NWS employees can influence their
career, develop their leadership skills, and contribute to and
shape the future of our agency.
For more information on LCDP see http://www.rdc.noaa.gov/~hrmo/leadership.htm.
Application information is available through this web site. Applications
must be received by the Human Resources Management Office not
later than close of business on the closing date, June 21, 2002.
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Working
Together to Save Lives:
Chris
Kornkven, Making A Difference
Chris Kornkven is an Electronics Technician with the Milwaukee/Sullivan
Weather Forecast Office (WFO). Prior to joining the NWS in 1990,
Kornkven was active in the Army and he continued his military
service in the Army Reserves after he joined the NWS. Not long
after he started at the NWS, he was deployed to the Persian Gulf
War. His tour of duty in the Persian Gulf led him to become an
advocate for better access to health care and medical research
for veterans and their families.
Even though he is an Electronics Technician by trade and education,
the Army also crossed-trained him to be in charge of his unit's
medical requirements as a secondary duty. "I soon found I
was working more on taking care of our unit's health than repairing
radios and I felt I contributed best by ensuring our soldiers
received good medical care," Kornkven said.
According to Kornkven, "When I came back from the Gulf with
a knee injury, I needed continuing care and follow-up surgeries.
I found it very difficult to navigate through the VA healthcare
system to get treatment. I also found many other Gulf veterans
were concerned with various health problems from the war."
Since he was working through the same problems, Kornkven says
it was natural for him help other veterans facing the same challenges.
"Veterans health is important to me because I witnessed
first hand the healthcare that was provided to those who put their
lives on the line for this country." Kornkven has testified
before or met with officials from the Presidential Oversight Committee,
Congressional Committees, the Centers for Disease Control, the
Presidential Special Oversight Board, and the National Institutes
of Health.
In 1992, he and three other veterans formed the National
Gulf War Resource Center. Kornkven is on the Board
of Directors and was President of the organization from 1995-2000.
This national non-profit organization has become a clearing-house
for health information pertaining to veterans and their families.
It has grown into a coalition that includes 60 other veterans
groups throughout the world. Kornkven notes, "We are now
able to voice our concerns nationally for better medical care
and research. We have produced and distributed Self-Help Guides
to over 30,000 veterans and their families. The publication is
in its 5th edition!" On May 3-5, 2002, the organization held
its 6th Annual Gulf War Conference in Atlanta, GA, which featured
many prominent speakers/panelists, including H. Ross Perot, a
Naval Academy graduate and veteran, and Dr. Mark Brown, Deputy
Secretary of Veterans Affairs. A Birmingham News article
about the event can
be found here.
"Chris brings a strong work ethic and 110 percent of himself
to all endeavors he pursues, said Kenneth Rizzo, Meteorologist-In-Charge
at the Milwaukee/Sullivan WFO. He never does anything half-way...on
the job and in his personal life, Chris serves his country well."
"Always remember that Memorial Day, Veterans Day, and Independence
Day are more than just work holidays...they are significant days
in the minds and hearts of veterans, their families, and the country.
Remember the sacrifices veterans made, especially from those who
will never come home," Kornkven said. "Veterans will
be coming home soon from Afghanistan and we as a Nation need to
follow-through on our commitment to these individuals and their
families, even after they hang up their uniforms."
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NWS Economic Statistics: Snazzy Facts for Dinner Party and Elevator
Conversations
We recently highlighted a useful list of economic impact statistics
compiled and verified by the Strategic Planning and Policy Office
at NWS Headquarters. The file is called NWS
Economic Statistics (a Wordperfect file). Here are
a couple of examples.
The annual cost of electricity could decrease by at
least $1 billion if the accuracy of weather forecasts improved
1 degree Fahrenheit. Source: Jones, Del. "Forecasts:
1 Degree is Worth $1B in Power Savings," USAToday.com, June
19, 2001.
Overall, the 1997-1998 El Niño is estimated
to have had total U.S. economic impacts on the order of $25 billion.
Source: Changnon, Stanley, ed. "El Nino 1997-1998; The Climate
Event of the Century," Oxford Press 2000, Chapter 6.
Take a moment and check it out, then bookmark the file for future
reference. Now NOAA has produced a booklet which includes the
same NWS statistics and adds similar statistics for all the NOAA
line offices. We've added the NOAA
Economic Statistics file (an Adobe Acrobat pdf file)
to the Communications Toolbox. If you have any good additions
to offer, send them to us at NWS.Focus@noaa.gov.
Be sure to include the original source information (where published,
when, author if known, and any other pertinent information so
the information can be verified).
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WFO Corpus Christi Helps Students Dare to Dream
The Corpus Christi, TX, Weather Forecast Office (WFO) recently
participated in Dare to Dream Day hosted by the Corpus Christi
Naval Air Station.
"This special day gave students an opportunity to meet people
who work in the community and learn about their contributions
to the community," said Donell Woods, Warning Coordination
Meteorologist at WFO Corpus Christi. The goal of the program was
to challenge students to "Dare to Dream" of being whoever
they want to be.
Joining Woods at the event were four other Corpus Christi staff:
Brian Lamarre, Senior Forecaster; Mark Lenz, Forecaster; Tawnya
Evans, Forecaster; and Mani Medrano, Administrative Support Assistant.
The messages of the day were You Can Do All Of This If
You Stay In School,' and Stay Away From Drugs, Gangs, and
Violence.' "Attendance was fantastic," reported Woods.
"Over 26 schools from the surrounding area participated,
bringing an estimated 10,000 students and teachers to the event."
The students toured military and civilian displays. WFO Corpus
Christi staff and the Naval Meteorology and Oceanography Detachment
in Corpus Christi teamed up to staff a weather booth. As Navy
and Air Force fighters and bombers flew overhead, static displays
of other aircrafts (such as the WC-130 weather plane) were available
on the ground.
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StormReady Designation Given to Special Community
An Eastern Idaho community has become a new addition to the StormReady
family with the "Special Community" designation. On
May 13, 2002, the Idaho Engineering and Environmental Laboratory
(INEEL) became the first nuclear test site to receive this citation.
INEEL is where the first nuclear submarine was developed and where
large cannons for the naval ships of WWII were tested (e.g., the
battle ship Missouri). INEEL is also where the first electricity
from nuclear power was invented. Today, INEEL continues to lead
the way in nuclear research.
"This is one of the test bed sites used for updating the
national criteria for special designation communities for StormReady,"
said Vernon Preston, Warning Coordination Meteorologist for the
Pocatello/Idaho Falls Weather Forecast Office. "In reality,
many of the StormReady requirements that the NWS is currently
working on comes from our work at INEEL."
INEEL is owned by the U.S. Department of Energy and operates
like an Air Force Base or Indian Reservation with its own security,
fire protection, and 24-hour emergency operations center (reported
to be the best in the state of Idaho). This is the first StormReady
designation of its kind.
In FY 2002, the state of Idaho has received two other notable
accomplishments: state with the most StormReady Communities (104
StormReady Designations: 21 Counties, 83 Communities); and state
with the most new counties in FY 2002. For more information on
the StormReady
Program, click here.
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Thanks for the Tips!
We post resources on the Communications Office web site that
can help you communicate better. Recently, we added a list of
tips for creating and delivering powerful presentations on our
Communication Toolbox page. Ursula Jones of the Weather Forecast
Office in Juneau, AK, sent us additional tips that we have added
to that list. Thanks Ursula! You can see the presentation tips
file at http://www.nws.noaa.gov/com/presentations/tools.htm.
We recommend you bookmark the page for future reference, and tell
us what other tools would help you tell the Weather Service story.
If you have materials that you want to add to our Communication
Toolbox, send them to NWS.Focus@noaa.gov.
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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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