| NOAA's NWS Focus |
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| June 30, 2003
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| On June 10,
2003, at the state capitol building in Topeka KS,
Governor Kathleen Sebelius signed a state proclamation
designating June 22-28, 2003, as Lightning Safety
Awareness Week in KS. NWS offices in Kansas partnered
with the Kansas Emergency Management agency and local
American Red Cross chapters to organize and develop
the proclamation. The agencies attended the Governor's
Proclamation signing and will continue to work together
to promote lightning safety and educational endeavors.
Click here for a larger
view.
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| Director's
Dialog:
What is the Corporate Board?
Director Kelly,
I hear much about the NWS Corporate Board. Who are the members
on this Board, and how did they become members? What is the function
of the Board, and what powers do they hold?
Thanks,
Ryan Sandler, Meteorologist Medford, Oregon
Thanks for your questions on the NWS Corporate Board.
The Board's functions are similar to those of a board of directors
in a corporation. The
NWS Board is comprised of the NWS Director and Deputy Director,
Regional Headquarters and Office Directors, the Chief Financial
Officer, Chief Information Officer, and the Director of Strategic
Planning and Policy.
The Corporate Board identifies issues needing corporate level
attention; evaluates options for resolution; determines the optimum
resolution; and, assures the Board's decisions are documented
and implemented.
In August 2002, the Board reorganized. An NOAA's NWS Focus article from August 12, 2003, highlights the Board's
role and provides more information that may help answer your questions.
More detail on the makeup and functions of the Corporate Board
is found in the Corporate
Board Handbook.
I encourage all NWS employees to read the information at these
links and become more familiar with your Corporate Board.
Jack Kelly
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| "Ask Why?"
Pilot Program Update
The six-month "Ask
Why?" pilot program aimed at encouraging employees to ask questions
about 'what we do and why we do it,' is gaining momentum. Thus far,
16 questions were submitted by NWS employees; of those, 13 were
answered within a three week time frame, and only three questions
were answered outside of three weeks.
"The program was implemented to fill a need identified by employees
during the SFA process. I am hopeful more employees will submit
questions as word gets out about the program and its high response
rate," states Chief Financial Officer Ted David.
Ask Why questions to date have included concerns about various
work procedures, including questions about observing, forecasting,
and equipment testing procedures.
The "Ask Why?" pilot program provides a vehicle for all NWS
employees to ask why performing one of their work activities is
necessary. Each question must be answered within three weeks,
forcing management to respond or implement effective and efficient
change. The program will be evaluated at the end of six months
to determine if it will be continued or if changes are needed
to improve the process.
NWS employees are encouraged to submit questions. For more detailed
information about this program and instructions for processing
a question, visit the Employee/Best
Practices web site.
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| NWS Directives
System: Lists of New Postings, Other Resources Available
The
NWS Directives System (NDS) web site contains several resources
for preparing and using NWS directives. Here are a few of them:
Check this section
to see a list of all the directives posted within the last 60
days. Just go to "New Directives" and click on the hyperlink underneath
and a list of new directives will appear along with their posted
dates. Since each posted directive provides a future effective
date (usually two weeks), checking this gives a heads up on new
directives soon to be implemented. The What's New in Directives
and Toolkit section also lists new procedures for preparing directives.
All new procedures will be included in the next version of NWS
Instructions 1-101. Staying aware of these procedures will make
it easier to write and coordinate a directive. Crosswalks can
be found in the NDS/WSOM X-REF section. These crosswalks help
users identify NDS directives which superseded Weather Service
Operations Manual (WSOM) Chapters and Operations Manual Letters
(OMLs). Contact the Office of Primary Responsibility for questions
about a particular WSOM Chapter or OML or NDS directive. This
section also links to the archives.
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| NWS Managers
Lead Information Technology Organization
NWS Chief Information
Officer Barry West has been elected President of the Federation
of Government Information Processing Councils (FGIPC). The FGIPC
is an intergovernmental/industry group looking at Information Technology
(IT) needs across the country.
Also new to the FGIPC Board of Directors is NWS Western Region
Director Vickie Nadolski. She will serve as the Vice President
of the Western Region of FGIPC. Both West and Nadolski were elected
for two-year terms during the recent FGIPC annual meeting.
Established in December 1979, and headquartered in Fairfax,
VA, the FGIPC is a not-for-profit corporation. The fundamental
purpose of the FGIPC is to facilitate and encourage communication
and partnerships between nationwide organizations of the government
IT community, industry, and the academic community.
West says FGIPC can help agency technologies evolve systematically
and efficiently, despite the rapidly-changing pace of IT development.
"In the past decade, many government agencies have found themselves
with old legacy systems. Chief Information Officers of organizations,
whether they are in government or the private sector, strive to
ensure all systems are adequate to support their agency's mission.
That's a tough job, but the FGIPC stands ready to help," West
said.
The council also provides IT education and training to maintain
high levels of technical competence for the information systems
workforce in federal, state, and local governments.
"The federation is the professional society of Information Technology
in government and structured as the governing agency with several
councils established to meet the needs of the members," Nadolski
said. "There are local FGIPC councils in many major metropolitan
areas across the U.S. The councils prepare programs to meet the
needs, interests, and capabilities of the government IT communities
of those geographic areas. Other councils are dedicated to specific
technologies of the IT industry and operate on a national basis."
One of FGIPC's advisory bodies is its Industry Advisory Council,
which provides facilitated networking between the public and private
IT sectors. "When the public and private sectors can create dynamic
partnerships, solutions to common problems can be tackled and
progress made that benefits everyone," added West.
West said the FGIPC represents the U.S. in the prestigious International
Council for Information Technology in Government Administration
(ICA), whose membership represents 23 countries. The FGIPC is
also a member of the Public Employee Roundtable (PER) which, with
30 other professional public sector organizations, works to educate
the American public on the important contributions made by public
employees.
FGIPC's education programs extend to members and others interested
in public sectors IT issues. There are instructional opportunities
in various formats, including short courses, topical conferences,
general conferences, self-study courses, and other formats. The
Third Annual Western Forum will be August 24 - 26, 2003, in Park
City, UT.
More information about the organization's activities and programs
is available at http://www.fgipc.org.
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| Community
Marks 50th Anniversary of Deadly Tornado
A year's worth of
planning and significant community involvement recently resulted
in a high-profile commemoration in Michigan of a 1953 tornado which
remains the last single U.S. tornado to kill over 100 people. On
June 8, 2003, the Detroit, MI, Weather Forecast Office (WFO) and
community partners marked the 50th anniversary of the "Flint-Beecher"
tornado at the site of one the worst natural disasters in the Nation's
history. A total of 116 lives were claimed on June 8, 1953, and
over 800 people suffered injuries as the tornado passed through
the northern Flint, MI, community of Beecher.
Nearly 500 people attended the commemoration at the Beecher
High School Auditorium, the very same facility that was nearly
destroyed in the 1953 twister. The master of ceremony was local
TV and radio personality John McMurray, and the event featured
keynote addresses from Storm Prediction Center (SPC) Director,
Joe Schaefer, FEMA Region 5 Director Ed Buikema, recollections
from tornado survivors, and an emotional reading of all 116 names
of those that died.
The ceremony was broadcast live on Flint ABC affiliate WJRT-TV,
and was covered by all major media in southeast Michigan, CNN,
and The Weather Channel. The Flint Journal ran special commemoration
editions throughout the preceding week.
The ceremony was preceded by a wreath-laying and memorial at
the Memorial Monument on the corner of Saginaw Street and Coldwater
Road, and was followed by a "Survivor Reunion" and reception in
the Beecher High School Field House. The reception included an
exhibit of scrapbooks, an extensive collection of historical photographs,
displays, historic newspapers, informational booths, and a tornado
remembrance sculpture by Flint artist Dianne Kudza.
All of these commemoration activities were the culmination of
a year's worth of planning and preparation by the Beecher 50th
Anniversary Commemoration Committee. Established by WFO Detroit
WCM, Rich Pollman, the committee included community leaders from
NOAA National Weather Service, American Red Cross, The Flint Journal,
Heart of Flint Senior Citizen Services, Sloan Museum, Genesee
and Lapeer County Emergency Management, The Salvation Army, Beecher
Schools, and the Flint Public Library.
WFO Detroit Meteorologist-In-Charge Dick Wagenmaker noted, "...everyone
on the committee did a wonderful job preparing the commemoration...
and it was incredible to see such community involvement. It is
obvious the impact of the tornado is still being felt in Flint,
even 50 years later... and it makes us realize the important role
the NWS plays in our communities." Ironically, following the ceremony,
a tornado hit the area causing substantial damage in the southern
Flint community of Grand Blanc. Unlike the Beecher tornado of
50 years prior, this tornado struck with 45 minutes advance warning
- and no one was killed or injured.
The spirit of the day was captured by Dawn Marie Nimtz of Bay
City in a letter to the Flint Journal, "...how ironic that I was
at the ceremonies and had gone to visit my Aunt Jean, who lives
on Kurtz Avenue (same house that was rebuilt afterwards), when
the sirens went off Sunday. I couldn't believe there were tornado
warnings on this same day, let alone an actual tornado touching
down. I have immense gratitude for today's National Weather Service."
For more information on the Flint-Beecher Tornado please visit:
http://www.crh.noaa.gov/dtx/1953beecher
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| NWS Forecaster
Travels to Honduras to Construct Water System
Senior Forecaster
Kerry Jones traveled to Nueva
Florida, Honduras recently to work with a group of graduate students
to build a new gravity-flow water system. Kerry Jones, who works
at the Albuquerque Weather Forecast Office, is also a part-time
graduate student at the University of New Mexico (UNM). The June
2-13, 2003, trip partially fulfilled the requirements of a capstone
course in the Water Resources Program at UNM.
"This was a great learning and cultural experience for us, but
it also provided an opportunity to share weather safety tips to
a community that has seen tremendous weather-related losses,"Jones
said. Hurricane Mitch devastated Honduras in 1998 and there are
still many vivid reminders of that deadly storm today. With the
help of an interpreter, Kerry Jones and his colleagues provided
some basic instruction regarding the village's water resources
and weather safety rules related to lightning, flash floods, and
hurricanes.
Nueva Florida
is a small, remote village located approximately 20 miles southwest
of Puerto Cortes, the largest port city on Honduras' north coast.
Located at 2,000 feet above sea level, the village is accessible
only by foot or horse. Kerry Jones' group included Professors
Michael Campana and Michele Minnis, along with graduate students
Cindy Noland and Danielle Shuryn. They lived with one of the local
families and worked with a local elementary teacher and water
activist, Alex del Cid Vasquez, to help construct a new gravity-flow
water system for the village. A stream at 3,000 feet above sea
level feeds the water system. Kerry Jones' group built a small
concrete dam whose reservoir will serve the approximately 45 families
in the village.
A second group of UNM students followed Jones' visit and constructed
a holding tank and a portion of the distribution system. The entire
water supply system is expected to be completed by early fall
2003.
Water projects similar to the one in Nueva Florida are partially
funded by the not-for-profit Ann Campana Judge Foundation (ACJ).
The ACJ Foundation was founded by Professor Campana in 2002 to
honor his late sister Ann Campana Judge, former Travel Department
Head of The National Geographic Society, who was killed on September
11, 2001. She was aboard American Airlines Flight 77, which crashed
into the Pentagon.
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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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