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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 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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