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| NOAA's NWS Focus -
May 20, 2002
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MIC Gary Austin welcomes
the guests to a media seminar at WFO Green Bay.
Click
here to read all about it. Photo
by Jeff Last.
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Click
here to take
a look at other NWS news, as submitted in the May
16, 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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Editors' Note: Any Retirees Out There?
We've noticed that Central Region Headquarters has a list
of retiree e-mail addresses to help people keep in touch.
The list has existed for a few years and can be found off
of the region's home page. We're guessing that some of our
readers may be NWS alums. If you are an NWS retiree, would
you like to have a list like Central Region's for all NWS
retirees? Are there any NWS retirees who get together and
do volunteer or charitable work? If so, please drop us a
note at NWS.Focus@noaa.gov
so we can recognize your activity.
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Hurricane
Season Outlooks Released
The NWS released outlooks for both the Atlantic
and Central
Pacific hurricane seasons today. Click the links
above to see the official press releases.
The 2002 Atlantic hurricane season will likely have normal
to slightly above normal levels of activity. The outlook
calls for the potential of nine to thirteen tropical storms,
with six to eight hurricanes, and two to three classified
as major hurricanes (Category 3 or higher on the Saffir-Simpson
Hurricane Scale), according to the press releases. The developing
El Niño should have no influence on the Atlantic
hurricane season.
The developing El Niño is of more concern in the
Pacific. The 2002 Central Pacific hurricane season is also
expected to bring an above average number of tropical cyclone
systemssix to seven. However, two of the most damaging
hurricanes to make landfall in Hawaii, Hurricane Iniki in
1992 and Hurricane Iwa in 1982, occurred during El Niño
years. The most recent forecast from NWS's Climate Prediction
Center calls for developing weak El Niño conditions
to prevail during this year's hurricane season, which runs
June 1 through November 30.
President George W. Bush signed a proclamation
announcing this week as National
Hurricane Awareness Week.
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Working
Together to Save Lives:
Teamwork
Helps Keep Walkers Safe
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Recently, a combination of timely NWS statements, watches,
and warnings, and the response of a Pennsylvania public
safety team helped protect participants in an outdoor fund-raiser.
On April 28, a March of Dimes Walk America event was scheduled
on Presque Isle, a park northwest of Erie, PA. That morning,
the Cleveland Weather Forecast Office (WFO) issued alerts
to the Skywarn and Emergency Management communities on the
potential for damaging thunderstorms. Several Skywarn spotters,
trained by the Cleveland WFO to report severe weather, were
part of an amateur radio group working with the March of
Dimes.
The Storm Prediction Center issued a tornado watch as the
morning progressed. Despite the watch, the March of Dimes
event continued. Steve La John, of Girard, wrote in a May
12 letter to the Erie Times-News editor,
"Moments after the event began came the notification
we all feared, a tornado warning. A decision was made to
cancel the walk and evacuate Presque Isle." All of
the walkers were successfully sheltered before the onset
of the storm. Golf ball-sized hail and damaging downburst
winds descended on Presque Isle nearly 45 minutes after
the warning was issued.
La John called the evacuation "an awesome display
of people helping people." This is an example of how
the National Weather Service is "working together to
save lives."
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Volunteer
Cooperative Observer Awards Announced
The NWS Cooperative Observer Program (COOP) is honoring
seven observers with Thomas Jefferson Awards and 27 observers
with John Campanius Holm Awards for 2002. These two prestigious
awards recognize outstanding cooperative observers who have
put in at least 20 years of dedicated service.
One of the goals of this year's COOP awards program is
to involve NOAA and NWS senior managers in presenting many
of these awards, said COOP Manager Andy Horvitz. Horvitz
said the COOP Program added a new length of service award
for 2002, the Richard H. "Dick" Hagemeyer Award.
This award recognizes individuals who complete 45 years
of COOP service. Named in honor of former Pacific Region
Director Dick Hagemeyer, the award was approved for 28 observers.
Sixty other awards were approved for observers with various
lengths of service. The program also honored 123 institutional
observation sites for lengths of service ranging from 25
years to 100 years.
"Our congratulations go out to all of this year's
awardees," said Horvitz. "These individuals and
institutions represent the highest level of cooperative
observer service to the Nation."
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Forecast Office Uses Adopt-A-County Program to Share Safety,
Spotter Training
Lead Forecaster Don Kirkpatrick of the Louisville, KY,
Weather Forecast Office (WFO) provided a fortuitous storm
safety and spotter class at Nelson County High School, his
"adopted county" and alma mater, just days before
damaging storms and tornadoes ripped through and ravaged
central Kentucky.
"This may have saved lives because it was so timely,"
said WFO Louisville Meteorologist-In- Charge Mike Matthews.
The session was hosted by the school's Junior Reserve Officer
Training Corps (JROTC) program and Nelson County Emergency
Management Agency. Part of Kirkpatrick's message was: "The
spotters are our ground troops. They are our eyes in the
field."
Over the past year meteorologists at WFO Louisville implemented
an "Adopt-A-County" program involving individual
forecasters who adopt specific counties and conduct safety
and spotter classes. Customers include emergency managers,
media, police dispatchers, schools, and many others.
"This has proven to be a highly effective program
considering the fifty-nine counties in the county warning
area of responsibility," Matthews said. Several other
central region offices have implemented the program. Central
Region Director, Dennis McCarthy, is a strong advocate and
proponent of the Adopt-A-County program and is overseeing
its implementation within the region.
"The program is a powerful and effective way of involving
all' staffers in outreach activities and is proving
to be very beneficial because it helps all of us get to
know our customers better," Matthews explained. "Ultimately,
the advantage is that because we better understand their
needs we can serve them better. We all end up benefitting
since they know the names and faces of the people who serve
them."
For more information, contact Mike Looney at Central Region
Headquarters, at 816-891-7734 extension 701.
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Media Seminar Draws Praise for Forecast Office
Eleven meteorologists and weather broadcasters, representing
five TV stations and one university, attended WFO Green
Bay's annual Spring Media Seminar on May 2. Warning Coordination
Meteorologist Jeff Last and Science and Operations Officer
Gene Brusky organized the event.
The group was briefed on topics including the 2001 severe
weather season, NOAA Weather Radio expansion in Wisconsin,
the meteorology and warning decisions behind several weather
events and given a demonstration of the Interactive Forecast
Preparation System Graphical Forecast Editor.
Tom Mahoney, chief meteorologist at the local CBS affiliate,
wrote in a follow-up note, "I am greatly impressed
by the outreach the NWS Green Bay office has extended the
media over the last five or so years. It is the best I've
ever been associated with. It is very much appreciated."
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Lighting Safety Awareness Week Wrap-Up
Lightning Safety Awareness Week (April 28 - May 4, 2002)
was a resounding success according to the NWS Lightning
Safety Awareness Team. Innovative partnerships between NWS
offices across the country and lightning experts, educators,
and the private sector to promote the "Lightning Kills:
Play it Safe" theme yielded a more enlightened public.
"We worked closely with the emergency management community
to get the word out," said Rusty Kapela, Warning Coordination
Meteorologist (WCM) from the Milwaukee Weather Forecast
Office (WFO). "Our goal was to hit the schools, the
media, and inter-county agencies with lightning safety messages
and I believe we succeeded in debunking some of the myths
about lightning that exist. We sent out recorded public
information statements, which were developed by the five
WFO's that service Wisconsin, three times each day (once
on every shift) to the NOAA Weather Wire, and recorded these
messages on our six weather radios. All of this information
was based on material found on the NWS
lightning safety web site."
Rick Dittmann, WCM from the Great Falls WFO reported that
his office worked with the Glasgow WFO to conduct a lightning
safety workshop for the Mid-Rivers Telephone Cooperative.
WFO Billings hand-delivered Lightning Safety Posters to
golf course pro shops through its warning area.
Many television interviews were conducted and radio segments
produced on lightning safety. Jim Vavrek, a Hammond, IN,
teacher who was a part of the Lightning Safety Awareness
Team, said PBS Channel 56 did a three and a half minute
special on lightning and received more calls from this special
than any other piece featured all year. As a result, Channel
56 now wants to do a half hour special about lightning and
tornadoes for Lake and Porter Counties in Indiana. Local
sponsors were also helpful in getting out the lightning
safety message. Andy Kula, Meteorologist from the Des Moines
WFO mentioned how the Iowa Cubs played the Rocco Mediate
30-second Public Service Announcement twice per game for
four games on their "jumbo screens," displayed
the lightning posters at information booths, and handed
out 300 lightning safety tip sheets in their Cubs Yearbooks.
Roger Lamoni, WCM from the Reno WFO, celebrated the week
with daily themed luncheons featuring a dose of lighting
safety. Jane Hollingsworth, Reno's Meteorologist-In-Charge
wrapped up the noontime festivities with a "situational
awareness" seminar and a salad and breadsticks potluck
lunch.
Todd Heitkamp, WCM from the Sioux Falls WFO, said the work
done in his area also helped to get rid of some of the fallacies
about lightning. "Many people in the upper-Midwest
don't take lightning seriously. The public has a lot of
misconceptions about thunderstorms and what behavior puts
them at risk of a lightning injury." Not only did Heitkamp
work closely with the media, but he also conducted a week-long
"Ready, Set, Go!" course that he developed for
fourth graders in Sioux Falls. Heitkamp also worked with
the Sioux Falls Parks and Recreation Department to develop
a lightning safety plan. As a result, all sports associations
that use a city field must now supply the department with
a written lightning safety plan.
Thanks to all the offices who took the time to submit their
Lightning Awareness Week activities to share in NOAA's NWS Focus.
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Blood: It Does a Body Good
Mike Anderson of the North Central River Forecast Center
contributed to the following report:
In January 2000, a family member of an NWS Chanhassen,
MN, forecaster was diagnosed with a very rare blood disease.
Over the course of 13 days, this individual received 260
units of plasma and six units of whole blood. (If a person
donated blood five to six times a year, or about every 56
days, it would take one donor about 43 years to donate the
same amount of plasma and blood needed by this patient in
a 13-day span.)
Fellow staff members realized the importance of routine
blood donations and organized their first NWS blood drive.
In the past two years, approximately 65 staff members from
three separate offices, the North Central River Forecast
Center, the Minneapolis National Weather Service Forecast
Office and the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing
Center have held four blood drives.
In June, the NWS facility will hold its 2002 Summer Blood
Drive in cooperation with the American Red Cross. During
each of the previous blood drives, 20 staff members, or
about 30 percent of all three offices, have donated. Ironically,
the last blood drive was September 11, 2001. Future blood
drives at Chanhassen have already been scheduled for October
2002 and for February 2003. Planning is currently underway
to possible include some of the other businesses in the
area to be a part of these future NWS Blood Drives.
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Also on the Web...Updated Office of Civil Rights Publications
The Department's Office of Civil Rights (OCR) has revised
three customer-oriented, user-friendly publications that
explain employee rights and responsibilities and provide
guidance on how employees may exercise their rights if they
believe they have faced discrimination.
The three revised publications that are now found on the
OCR web pages are:
- Manual for Processing Discrimination Complaints
- Sexual Orientation Discrimination: Questions & Answers
- EEO Mediation Guide
Find these publications on the OCR web site at http://www.doc.gov/ocr/publications.html.
Comments or questions? Contact Mary Ann Mausser at mmausser@doc.gov
or (202) 482-4993.
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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 employee
communications? We want to hear from you! E-mail us at 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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