| NOAA's NWS Focus |
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| May 5, 2003 |
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The forecast office in Pendleton,
OR, brought a new generation of workers to the
National Weather Service on Take Your Daughters
and Sons to Work Day, April 24, 2003. Click
here to read about it.
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IFPS Initial
Operating Capability Schedule Change Affects Alaska, Pacific
Regions
The schedule for achieving
the initial operating capability (IOC) for the Interactive Forecast
Preparation System (IFPS) at forecast offices in Alaska and Pacific
Regions has changed. NWS Director Jack Kelly approved a modified
schedule recommended by the Office of Science and Technology, the
Office of Climate, Water, and Weather Services, Pacific Region,
and Alaska Region. The original date for both regions was December
31, 2003. The modified schedule has IOC in the Alaska Region on
June 30, 2004, and IOC in the Pacific Region on October 15, 2004.
"The schedule change accommodates centralized software development
efforts, and the requirement for Alaska and Pacific Region WFOs
to have sufficient time for forecaster training/familiarization
and software localization before entering the Operational Readiness
Demonstration (ORD) and subsequently IOC," said Jack Hayes, Director
of the NWS Office of Science and Technology. This process follows
the model used for WFOs in the continental United States (CONUS),
which will have at least three months of forecaster training/familiarization
and software localization before the CONUS ORD. The Pacific Region
also requires that the forecaster training/familiarization and
software localization and ORD occur during the tropical cyclone
season. The new schedule accommodates this requirement and allows
the Alaska Region to proceed on a faster schedule since they
do not require testing during tropical cyclone season.
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Working
Together To Save Lives:
Relocated Radar, Training, and Teamwork Yield Lengthy Tornado Lead Time
in Mississippi
Thanks to a newly-placed
Doppler radar and the actions of highly trained meteorologists,
the National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office (WFO)
in Jackson, MS, provided an approximate 36-minute lead time
for an F3 tornado which struck Brandon, MS, on April 24, 2003.
No lives were lost in the storm.
"This extraordinary
lead time is even more remarkable due to the fact that the
tornado did not drop from the thunderstorm until it was over
the Brandon city limits," said NWS Southern Region Deputy
Director Gary Grice. In addition, WFO Jackson staff provided
a running update to the Brandon community that a tornado was
likely to occur prior to tornado formation.
A key factor in the
extraordinary long lead time provided for this tornado was
the ability of the warning meteorologists at WFO Jackson to
target the developing thunderstorm and rapidly identify the
wind field signatures as tornadic at an early stage in the
storm's development. Radar and other weather observations were
crucial to the meteorologists' analyses. Extensive training
in severe weather, including the use of several tornado simulator
cases, were key factors in enabling the warning meteorologists
to correctly identify this storm as tornadic well before strong
rotation was detected on radar.
Data from the Brandon
WSR-88D, in combination with a keen awareness of the evolving
wind fields in the atmosphere, provided critical clues that
this particular thunderstorm, as opposed to other storms in
the area, likely would become tornadic very rapidly. Improved
rainfall intensity detection from the Brandon radar highlighted
an area around Brandon, and in the thunderstorm's path, that
would support rapid tornado development. The Brandon radar
was installed recently to enhance rainfall interrogation over
eastern Mississippi versus what had been available from the
original Jackson radar which was partially blocked east of
the radar site by higher terrain.
Working closely with
Jackson WFO staff, Mississippi amateur radio operators also
played a critical role. Before and during the event, amateur
radio operators relayed critical spotter reports to the WFO.
About five minutes before the tornado dropped from the thunderstorm
over Brandon, amateur radio operators were asked by the Jackson
WFO to broadcast a message that the NWS was very confident
that a tornado was developing and would be entering the Brandon
area within the next few moments. The issuance of timely, accurate,
and relevant severe weather warnings depends on the successful
integration of weather information from radar with the evolving
atmospheric situation by a fully staffed WFO of trained meteorologists.
This was demonstrated by the Jackson WFO before and during
the Brandon tornado.
Anticipating severe
weather, the forecast office increased the number of meteorologists
on duty hours before the storm hit. The seven warning meteorologists
and one hydrometeorological technician on duty at the WFO closely
monitored this rapidly evolving and potentially explosive situation
using the NWS Advanced Weather Interactive Processing System
(AWIPS). AWIPS combined radar data, along with other atmospheric
observations, to provide the WFO staff with a three-dimensional
view of thunderstorm evolution with time. Using multiple AWIPS
workstations, the WFO's County Warning Area was segmented for
warning operations with different warning meteorologists concentrating
on different parts of the area. One warning meteorologist focused
solely on the area around Brandon and Jackson. This severe
weather staffing arrangement enabled the Jackson WFO warning
meteorologists to issue five Severe Weather Statements for
the area around Brandon during the tornado warning, providing
critical updates on the position and path of the storm. Additionally,
this staffing level allowed the Jackson WFO Severe Weather
Coordinator to stay in nearly continual contact with emergency
management officials in Brandon via the National Warning System.
Together, they were able to provide citizens with updates on
the location of the storm and receive reports of damage associated
with the tornado.
Being a certified
StormReady city, the officials and residents of Brandon were
prepared to act on the advance tornado warning from WFO Jackson.
The training and preparedness work paid off with no loss of
life even though damage was extensive.
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Phased Array
Radar Testing Begins at NOAA Lab
NOAA has begun testing
the first full-time phased array radar facility. The new National
Weather Radar Testbed got its public unveiling at the National
Severe Storm Laboratory (NSSL) in Norman, OK, on April 25, 2003.
Researchers at the lab will determine if phased array radar
will become the next significant technology advancement to improve
our Nation's weather services.
Using multiple beams and frequencies controlled electronically,
phased array radar reduces the scan time of severe weather from
six minutes for NEXRAD radar to only one minute, producing quicker
updates of data and thereby potentially increasing the lead time
for tornado warnings.
The phased array technology is currently used to protect Navy
battle groups from missile threats. Read the full
NOAA news release here.
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Flexible Spending
Account Open Season Begins May 19
The first open season
for federal employees to establish personal Flexible Spending Accounts
(FSAs) will be May 19, 2003, and ends June 20, 2003, according
to the Office of Personnel Management. Employees who set up FSAs
can later tap their accounts to pay for the uncovered portions
of qualified medical costs, or for dependent-care expenses. All
employee contributions to FSAs are made from pre-tax earnings,
but there are no government contributions to the program.
During this open season, employees can elect to enroll in the
healthcare FSA (HCFSA) and/or a dependent care FSA (DCFSA). According
to OPM, subsequent FSA open seasons will coincide each year with
the FEHB open season. During that time, employees will have the
opportunity to elect a HCFSA and/or a DCFSA for the Plan Year
which begins the next January 1. Open season for the 2004 plan
year is set for November 10 through December 8, 2003.
See the OPM
web site for more details.
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Future Forecasters
Gather in Oregon During Take Your Child to Work Day
"A New Generation at
Work" was the title for the Pendleton, OR, Weather Forecast Office's
(WFO's) version of the national Take Your Child to Work Day on
April 24, 2003.
The day began with a Conversation Café, an open discussion
with the children about various jobs and what they want to do
when they grow up. Pendleton Warning Coordination Meteorologist
(WCM) Dennis Hull discussed the duties of WFO Pendleton and how
weather affects peoples' lives. His discussion also included
a demonstration of how tornados form using a mini tornado simulation.
Hull and Electronics Technician/Diversity Team member Andy
Miller gave a tour of the Pendleton facility including the forecast
operations center and the radar. The children worked with forecasters
Jeremy Wolf and Bryan Henry and Science Operations Officer Jon
Mittelstadt and learned how the staff gathers information and
makes forecasts. Each child was given a packet of weather information
and games and each had their photo framed as an
Honorary Forecaster. Children ranging from 6 to 13 years
old participated in the event.
Pendleton's Take Your Child to Work Day was organized by Hull,
Administrative Support Assistant/Diversity Focal Point Diana
Locke, and Service Hydrologist Marilyn Lohmann.
Click here to see pictures
of the day's activities.
Did your office also do an activity on Take Your Child to Work
Day? Send us a photo and caption at NWS.Focus@noaa.gov no
later than close of business May 7 and we'll compile a photo
page for the next issue.
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Network Control
Facility is Customer Support Award Finalist
The NWS Network
Control Facility (NCF) is a finalist for this year's Government
Customer Support Awards in the category of Technical Excellence.
Finalists will be recognized and winners will be announced during
the Government Customer Support Conference awards luncheon at the
Hilton in Crystal City, VA, on June 2, 2003. Digital Consulting
Institute sponsors the customer support awards.
The NCF delivers weather data products to the Advanced Weather
Interactive Processing System (AWIPS) systems and manages the
AWIPS monitor and control functions. Many of the NCF functions
relate to its role as a central point for managing the AWIPS
Communications Network, which consists of the Satellite Broadcast
Network and terrestrial wide area network. The NCF, based at
NWS Headquarters, operates 24-hours a day, 7-days a week.
A February 2003 contractor-conducted opinion survey found that
92 percent of NWS field staff give the AWIPS NCF help desk an
overall rating of excellent or good.
Information on the Government Customer Support Conference is
available at www.dci.com/events/govcs/.
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Employee Milestones
- Click here to see NEW
APPOINTMENTS/TRANSFERS to NWS through April 30, 2003.
- Click here to see RETIREMENTS/DEPARTURES
from NWS through April 30, 2003.
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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
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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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