| NOAA's NWS Focus |
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| June 2, 2003 |
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A rocket-launching competition
highlighted this year's Women in Science Forum,
hosted by the NWS forecast office in Cheyenne,
WY, on the campus of the University of Wyoming.
The winning rocket rose several hundred feet while
students and faculty watched. Read
more about the forum here.
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Interactive
Forecast Preparation System Science Steering Team Begins
Work
A new NWS team created
to guide the science behind the Interactive Forecast Preparation
System (IFPS) met recently and began its work.
The Science and Technology (S&T) Committee of the NWS Corporate
Board chartered the IFPS Science Steering Team (ISST) at the
Board's March 2003 meeting.
The ISST will collect and take ownership of IFPS science-related
issues, said Brad Colman, team leader and Science and Operations
Officer (SOO) at the Seattle, WA, Weather Forecast Office (WFO).
The team will define and/or refine these issues, explore alternatives
for solving them, and recommend courses of action.
Colman said the team's goal is to have solutions endorsed by
the S&T Committee and, when necessary, the NWS Corporate Board,
and to integrate solutions into the NWS Science and Technology
Infusion Plan, NOAA budget process, and science outreach funding
announcements.
"The team will identify, collect, prioritize, and propose focused
solutions and recommended courses of action to IFPS science issues," Colman
explained. "Recognized as a primary conduit between IFPS operations
and NWS Headquarters, this team of field experts will serve to
better ensure scientific and technological integrity in the digital
forecast process."
The team met at the Western Region SOO/Development and Operations
Hydrologist Workshop during the week of May 5, 2003. The workshop
focused on science and technology issues relating to IFPS. Colman
said the team used this meeting as an opportunity to "jump-start" its
activities.
Team members are: Colman, Peter Manousos, backup team leader - Hydrometeorological
Prediction Center, National Centers for Environmental Prediction,
Camp Springs, MD; Dan Baumgardt, WFO La Crosse, WI; Mark Jackson,
WFO Salt Lake City, UT; Larry Lee, WFO Greenville-Spartanburg,
SC; Andy Patrick, WFO Corpus Christi, TX; Eric Stevens, WFO Fairbanks,
AK; Bill Ward, WFO Guam; Ken Waters, Pacific Region Headquarters;
and, Kevin Schrab, facilitator - NWS Headquarters Office of Science
and Technology, Silver Spring, MD.
The team will draw on subject matter experts from NOAA development
labs and other research and educational institutions to aid in
exploring alternatives and proposing solutions. Anyone with IFPS
science-related issues or concerns may contact one of the ISST
members.
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National Digital
Forecast Database Outreach Efforts Paying Off
Efforts by the Phoenix,
AZ, Weather Forecast Office (WFO) to demonstrate to customers how
they can access and use the National Digital Forecast Database
(NDFD) are yielding results.
WFO Phoenix Warning Coordination Meteorologist David Runyan,
and Information Technology Officer Dave Brown visited the State's
Emergency Operations Center (EOC) May 20, 2003, to demonstrate
how to access the NDFD.
Matt Parks, a state threat assessment officer, quickly saw
multiple benefits of the NDFD for his agency.
"The NWS NDFD will enhance our EOC's operation during disaster
events, search and rescue, and emergency response planning initiatives," said
Parks. "The GIS format of the NDFD allows us to design how we
need to see the weather forecast, in a graphical format that
we can inter-relate with other critical information during an
event. Our search and rescue people need the detailed temperature
forecast data, and are eager to receive the precipitation and
wind forecast data sets that are scheduled to be available later
this year."
The emergency management information technology personnel were
impressed with the simplicity of downloading the NWS NDFD access
and image generation application software, and the ease of obtaining
the NDFD on a daily basis. Downloading the NDFD is now a routine
task for their administration assistants.
Runyan and Brown have also taken the NDFD technology to the
Arizona Department of Transportation, an agency that is designing
a new "Intelligent Transportation System" to be a model program
replicated across the Nation.
"My goal as a WCM, in teamwork with fellow WCMs of Arizona,
is to take the accessibility of the NWS NDFD to as wide a range
of potential users in Arizona as possible," Runyan said. "The
challenge is to identify those who have the need and technology
to use our exciting new service. My NDFD outreach experiences
have been positive as state and local government, law enforcement,
land management agencies, and public health services are quick
to see useful application within their agencies. The NWS NDFD
ftp access is easy to set up on-site and to demonstrate within
a few minutes of walking in the front door."
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Working
Together To Save Lives:
Some Congress Members Promoting NOAA Weather Radio
Some congressional leaders
are touting NOAA Weather Radio's technology and its safety benefits
at a time when tornadoes, homeland security, and the approaching
hurricane season have all been in the news.
The House Science Committee chairman and other committee members
asked for a briefing on NOAA Weather Radio by representatives
of NOAA, NWS, and weather radio manufacturers recently.
In a recent news release, Science Committee Chairman Sherwood
Boehlert (R-NY) and Ranking Democrat Ralph M. Hall (D-TX) described
the contents of a letter sent to Homeland Security Secretary
Tom Ridge, touting the homeland security benefits of NOAA Weather
Radio and requesting that the early warning technology be added
as an emergency preparedness kit item.
Read the full House
Science Committee news release here.
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New
NOAA Weather Radio Brochure, Poster Available Soon
Two new
NOAA Weather Radio (NWR) publications, a poster and
a brochure, will be available in the coming weeks.
The publications contain general information
about the NWR program, and how to receive the NWR
broadcasts that operate 24 hours a day from over
800 transmitters nationwide. Specific Area Message
Encoders (SAME) are explained, and the brochure
contains a table of fast facts about NWR.
Both publications feature plots showing the locations,
broadcast power, and frequency of the NWR transmitters
in operation as of October 1, 2002. Links to all
122 supervising Weather Forecast Offices are also
shown.
Electronic copies of the NWR poster and brochure
are also on the OCWWS web site as Adobe Acrobat
files at http://www.nws.noaa.gov/om/brochures.shtml.
The publications were completed by the Office
of Operational Systems, Dissemination Systems Branch,
with assistance from the Office of Climate, Water,
and Weather Services, Awareness Branch.
"All six NWS regional NWR focal points are receiving
copies for distribution within their regions," said
Baron. "It would be best for field offices to obtain
their initial copies from the regions, because
the number of copies to be stocked by NLSC is very
limited." Baron said offices can order a maximum
of 50 copies of each item from the National Logistics
Support Center in Kansas City, MO.
The ordering procedure is to call NLSC at 816-926-3990,
and provide NOAA stock numbers, and accounting
information. NLSC also accepts fax orders (816-926-7901).
The stock numbers are:
- NWR Poster -- NOAA PA 200352
- NWR Brochure -- NOAA PA 200356
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Rocket Launch
at University of Wyoming Highlights 2003 Women in Science
Forum
Nearly 450 junior and
senior high school students participated in the fifth Cheyenne,
WY, Women in Science (WIS) Forum recently. Hosted by the Cheyenne
Weather Forecast Office, both boys and girls from around the state
attended this year's forum at the University of Wyoming campus.
The day-long activity featured noted professional women scientists,
visits to university science laboratories, a free lunch, and a
rocket launching competition between visiting schools. "By every
measure, this year's effort was the best yet!" said Cheyenne Meteorologist-In-Charge
William Parker.
WIS forums started in Cheyenne, WY, in 1998, and
have grown steadily in attendance and substance
each year. The forums showcase professional women
of science as mentors and role models to young women,
encouraging them to pursue science careers after
high school.
The 2003 forum featured two outstanding keynote
speakers, NASA Astronaut Janice
Voss and NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory Astronomer,
Jo Pitesky. Joining them was Wendy Abshire, an Atmospheric
Scientist from UCAR in Boulder, CO, and Amparo Crump,
a Cheyenne Embalmer from Schrader Funeral Home.
Also featured were members of the University of
Wyoming faculty.
A student team of junior and senior high school
girls was assembled to assist with the panel selection
and help structure the forum. "We think it's important
that we keep a student perspective in developing
these forums," said Forecaster Jennifer Stark, this
year's Project Coordinator.
An important aspect of the WIS forums has been
developing effective public-private partnerships.
This year, the forum was again co-sponsored by the
Wyoming NASA Space Grant Consortium. Local corporate
and civic groups including the Wyoming Student Loan
Corporation, Cheyenne Zonta Club, and the Cheyenne
Kiwanis Club donated time and funds. Donations in
grants and gifts totaled more than $10,000 for this
year's forum.
"Together we were able to leverage resources and
provide a forum with statewide reach," said Parker.
One highlight of this year's forum was a rocket
building and launching competition.
"We wanted to try something new - a variation
of the egg dropping experiment," said Stark. "We
thought launching two-liter pop bottle rockets would
be something new and different, and I think we hit
on a good idea. Judging from the crowd reaction,
I know this competition will become a regular feature.
It takes teamwork and some knowledge of physics
and aerodynamics to build a competitive rocket."
"The WIS project is likely to continue," Parker
said.
"Each year we wonder if the time and effort it
takes is worth it, and each spring we decide to
have another go. In the bigger scheme, research
has shown that our Nation will be needing more and
more scientists in the coming years. Building interest
in these careers is something the NWS can do at
the local and state level and the Women in Science
project is one way to tackle this problem."
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Employee Milestones
- Click here to see NEW
APPOINTMENTS/TRANSFERS to NWS through May 31, 2003.
- Click here to see RETIREMENTS/DEPARTURES
from NWS through May 31, 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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Communications Office
ATTN: W/COM
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