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NOAA's NWS Focus -
June 10,
2002
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Tom
Amis (third from left), Meteorologist-in-Charge of
the NWS Center Weather Service Unit in Fort Worth,
TX, is awarded a plaque from FAA Deputy Administrator,
Monte Belger (left). The plaque, presented at a June
6, 2002, ceremony, recognizes Amis' work in bringing
live NWS radar data to air traffic controller displays.
Read
more about the radar project by clicking here.
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Click
here to take a look
at other NWS news, as submitted in the June 6, 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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NWS Begins
Delivering Real-Time Weather Radar to Air Traffic Controllers
Air traffic controllers in Fort Worth, TX, for the first time
are seeing high-resolution information from the Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA)/NWS weather radar network on their radar
displays, along with normal aircraft positional data.
NWS has worked extensively with the FAA's Weather and Radar Processor
(WARP) team to deliver this new capability, which reached initial
operational status at the FAA's Air Route Traffic Control Center
(ARTCC) in Fort Worth, TX, on May 20, 2002.
"This real-time radar data will allow controllers to more
accurately route air traffic around thunderstorms," said
Mark Andrews, Aviation Program Manager, NWS Office of Climate,
Water, and Weather Services.
Full operational status is expected to be reached in Fort Worth
on June 19, 2002. The FAA plans on installing this system upgrade
to the remaining 20 ARTCC's during the rest of 2002 and early
2003. The FAA held a news conference on the new radar capability
in Fort Worth on June 6. Click here
to read the FAA
news release.
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Summer Training Opportunities for Forecasters
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Challenging forecast problems that arise during the summer season
are the focus of some new training courses available to NWS forecasters
through Cooperative Program for Operational Meteorology, Education
and Training (COMET).
"Maintaining our skills and knowledge of seasonal forecasting
events is essential to providing high quality service to our customers,"
said Greg Mandt, Director of the Office of Climate, Water, and
Weather Services.
Fire Weather Forecasting is among the training courses offered
on compact disc from COMET. LeRoy Spayd, Chief of the COMET Branch
of the Training Division, notes "This CD provides learners
with the opportunity to go through several cases which simulate
customer interactions while following a process for formulating
two types of fire weather products."
COMET has also just released another course to prepare for hurricanes:
Community Hurricane Preparedness training targeted for emergency
managers in English
and Spanish.
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New Weather
Event Simulator Guide Available
The Office of Climate, Water, and Weather Service's Warning Decision
Training Branch (WDTB) in Norman, OK, has released a Weather Event
Simulator (WES) Simulation Guide covering the August 11, 1999,
Salt Lake City severe weather event. This event challenges forecasters
to maintain situational awareness under challenging circumstances.
The guide provides four WES simulation examples. Each simulation
includes a training objective, a training methodology, and evaluation
criteria. Each simulation can stand by itself and averages between
8 and 20 pages in length. This guide can also be used as an effective
template for developing local WES simulations. For a copy, see
your local Science and Operations Officer or contact WDTB's Ed
Mahoney at ed.mahoney@noaa.gov.
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Working
Together to Save Lives:
Computer Game Teaches Hurricane Safety
An interactive computer module which teaches hurricane safety
and preparedness using a virtual family is the result of a cooperative
effort between the NWS and other groups.
NWS, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, and the Cooperative
Program for Operational Meteorology, Education, and Training (COMET)
cooperatively produced the interactive computer module primarily
for a middle school student audience.
In Hurricane Strike! the student becomes a visitor
to a virtual Florida home. Just as he or she arrives, the Weather
Channel announces the approach of Tropical Storm Erin on the TV
set in the living room.
The storm intensifies over a six-day period (as seen in subsequent
weather reports) and on each day the student must perform tasks
to prepare for the hurricane. The family's laptop computer becomes
a means of investigating hurricanes from a scientific perspective.
One scientific activity allows the student to move around and
through the storm in three-dimensions. One of the safety tasks
requires the student to choose grocery store items that the family
might need if the hurricane strikes.
"This is the best kind of educational material," said
Scott Kiser, NOAA Hurricane Program Manager. "It teaches
students and their parents the principles of hurricane safety
and preparedness, but it's also a lot of fun."
The Hurricane Strike! CD-ROM will be distributed
in late June to Weather Forecast Offices and the American Meteorology
Society's national network of science teachers. The module will
also be available on the COMET
Program's web site. A teacher's guide is included, along with
printable worksheets that can be used to test a student's knowledge
at various points.
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NWS's Collaborative Convective Forecast Product (CCFP) Receives
Kudos
Delta Airlines and two Central Weather Service Units (CWSUs)
recently praised the NWS's Aviation Weather Center's (AWC's) CCFP
through online feedback.
"I have noticed a trend by most, if not all AWC forecasters
to conduct the chat sessions in a much more professional manner.
Collaboration appears to be running at higher efficiency and with
a much more open attitude than during the prior year," said
Howard Bookman of CWSU ZTL (Atlanta) on June 1. Lyle Alexander
of CWSU ZID (Indianapolis) agreed, "I would have to say there
is a marked improvement in the accuracy [of the CCFP]. I believe
this is reflected in the entire staff. A few years of experience
helps a great deal."
The CCFP consists of two-, four-, and six-hour forecasts of thunderstorm
coverage showing indications of growth potential and probability
of occurrence. An initial forecast, produced at the AWC, evolves
into a final product through collaboration with participating
meteorologists from the airlines and CWSUs.
"Let me add my name to the comments and praises of Howard
and Lyle about the professionalism of the AWC CCFP forecasters/moderators,"
said Don Stewart, Senior Meteorologist with Delta Airlines on
June 3. "They have a tough, tough job and are doing a fine
job! It's very hard to moderate a compromise between two very
differing opinions."
The CCFP is in its third season.
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Forecast
Office Partners with Middle Schools on "Project Weather Watch"
During the 2001-2002 school year, the Weather Forecast Office
(WFO) in Shreveport, LA, partnered with several area middle schools
and the Alliance for Education in an effort called "Project
Weather Watch." Students and teachers experienced hands-on
activities with various weather instruments, while NWS meteorologists
served as mentors for the participating schools throughout the
program. Click here for more details and photos from Project
Weather Watch.
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Leave Donation
Web Site Online
NOAA headquarters has launched a web site designed to assist employees
interested in participating in the Voluntary Leave Transfer Program.
It lists participating NOAA employees who are approved to receive
transferred leave. It also includes links to the forms required
for making leave donations. Visit the NOAA
Leave Donor Information Page by following this
link.
The Department of Commerce has posted guidelines and policies
for the Leave Donor Transfer Program on their Office
of Human Resources Management site.
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News Release Highlights
Here are some recent news releases from the NOAA
Office of Public Affairs.
CONDITIONS
FUEL EL NIÑO DEVELOPMENT (June 6, 2002)
COMMERCE
AWARDS NEW CLIMATE AND WEATHER SUPERCOMPUTER CONTRACT TO IBM
(May 31, 2002)
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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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