| NOAA's NWS Focus -
July 9, 2002
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| Todd Morris,
Meteorologist-In Charge of the Los Angeles, CA, forecast
office, briefs media at the June 24, 2002, launch
of NOAA's newest satellite. Read all about it by following
this link.
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Click
here to take a look
at other NWS news, as submitted in the June 27, 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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A Picture Worth A Thousand Words in Melbourne Florida
The Melbourne, FL, Weather Forecast Office (WFO) is taking graphical
weather products to a new level. Starting in the spring of 1999,
the office began producing and posting on its web page a Graphical
Hazardous Weather Outlook every morning for its users. The daily
outlook depicts levels of threat for a comprehensive range of
weather hazards, including thunderstorms, flooding, coastal, marine,
and wildfires. According to Dave Sharp, Science and Operations
Officer, "the idea was to give decision makers such as emergency
managers information they could readily use to plan their day
and distribute their resources according to the threat that exists
for that day."
According to Bart Hagemeyer, Melbourne's Meteorologist In Charge
(MIC), "these products have been evolving over the last several
years. They change according to ideas we receive from our users.
By now, most county emergency managers check these graphics every
day."
The WFO also issues a separate graphical product when tropical
weather threatens. A Combined Tropical Cyclone Hazards product
depicts the kind of threat that exists, including wind, storm
surge, flooding, marine, and tornado. For each category, a level
of threat, from very low to extreme, is specified. The Tropical
Cyclone Hazards product complements the Hurricane Local Statement
by providing a visual display of the impact of tropical weather
on Melbourne's area of responsibility. The catalyst for this product
was Hurricane Floyd in 1999. Forecast to hit east central Florida,
it curved away from the coast. Sharp says, "the challenge
was to show the emergency management community the changing threat
as the forecast track for Floyd changed. If you are an emergency
manager trying to get information from multiple sources, text
products can be long and complex."
Currently these products are largely custom made graphics produced
by forecasters. Hagemeyer adds that, "forecasters synthesize
their knowledge of the state of the weather and depict that information
graphically." However, the Graphical Forecast Editor (GFE)
of the Interactive Forecast Preparation System (IFPS) is used
as much as possible. "We'll transition to all IFPS over time,"
said Hagemeyer.
In fact, recent collaboration with WFO Tampa Bay has lead to
a fully GFE-based Combined Tropical Cyclone Hazard product suite.
This new version will be used by WFO Melbourne during the 2002
Hurricane Season and will be made available to other Florida WFO's
for use later this season.
"Melbourne's use of graphical products is an example of
the kind of products and services planned with IFPS," states
Bob Glahn, IFPS Program Manager. "The new forecasting process
will facilitate a change from schedule-driven, text-oriented forecasts
to interactive, collaborative and information-oriented services
to give NWS customers what they want: more weather data, higher
resolution forecasts, visual displays, and user-defined products."
Check out Melbourne's Graphical Hazardous Weather Outlook web
page at http://www.srh.noaa.gov/mlb/hwofiles/hwomain.html.
For an overview of IFPS, see the article by Bob
Glahn in the May 6, 2002 issue of NOAA's NWS Focus.
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MIC Briefs
Media at Satellite Launch
NOAA-17, a new NOAA satellite that will improve weather forecasting
and monitor environmental events around the world was launched
on June 24, 2002, from Vandenberg Air Force Base, CA. NOAA's National
Environmental Satellite, Data, and Information Service, NASA,
the U.S. Air Force, and several civilian companies partnered to
send the newest environmental satellite into space aboard a vintage
Titan II rocket.
Todd Morris, meteorologist-in-charge at the NWS Los Angeles-Oxnard
office, briefed media covering the launch and explained how NWS
meteorologists use NOAA's environmental satellites. Morris called
his office several times while en route to update himself on dense
fog conditions. When he and reporters arrived at the launch area,
Morris said, "It is going to be close on the timing as to
whether the fog or the rocket will lift first. I hope we can see
it and not just hear it."
Finally, at 11:23 a.m., Pacific Standard Time, a colorful plume
of brown smoke announced the successful launch of NOAA-17.
"To be here was a great opportunity for me," Morris
said. "Within a few short weeks, our teams of meteorologists
across the country will begin receiving the data. The data from
the NOAA-17 weather satellite will be important to improving our
long-range climate forecasts. The more scientists know in advance
of an approaching weather system, the better they can perform
their jobs effectively."
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Coastal
Storms Initiative Buoy Launched
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A new weather buoy, funded
through NOAA's Coastal Storms Initiative, was deployed on June
25, 2002, near the edge of the Gulf Stream, 42 miles east of St.
Augustine, FL. The buoy, identified as 41012, joins two similar
models off Florida's Atlantic Coast. The buoy will give NWS meteorologists
in Jacksonville more information to develop better marine weather
forecasts, as well as giving oceanographers and biologists improved
data on water movements below the surface.
"This buoy fills a data gap in marine observations, which
help meteorologists understand current conditions over the water
and issue more detailed forecasts," said Paul Moersdorf,
NDBC Director. "The new buoy is also what the marine community
needs to ensure they have the latest observations to make safe
decisions in the water."
Data buoys collect real-time observations of wind speed, wave
heights, and air-and sea-surface temperatures. Buoy 41012 also
reports the water's salt content, a first for NDBC buoys. Long-term
salinity measurements help scientists monitor changes in the underwater
ecosystem, including fish and plant life.
The new buoy, launched by the National Data Buoy Center (NDBC)
and the U.S. Coast Guard, will give a vertical profile of ocean
current measurements using an Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler,
which operates much like a Doppler weather radar. The profiler
sends sound waves in different directions toward the ocean floor,
and helps detect shifts in ocean currents.
"Resource managers and local officials in the St. John's
watershed will benefit from the data the sensors provide,"
said Jamison Hawkins, deputy director of NOAA's National Ocean
Service. It gives them the best information available to make
critical decisions about land and natural
resource use in the coastal zone."
The Coastal Storms Initiative, administered by NOAA's National
Ocean Service, is responsible for a wide range of activities in
the Jacksonville area, including improved measurements of the
depths and currents of the St. John's River.
The new buoy's real-time weather observations will be posted
under the "Recent Data"
section of the NDBC's web site. The latest observations also
are available through the Dial-a-Buoy system, (228) 688-1948.
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NWS
Supports Antarctic Ice Rescue
Some employees in the Office of the Chief Information Officer
at NWS Headquarters did their part recently to support a rescue
mission at the bottom of the world. A team from the Operations
Support and Performance Monitoring Branch of the Telecommunications
Operations Center helped an international effort to rescue
the crew on a ship stranded in an Antarctic ice jam. The team
leader is Fred Branski, with team members Julie Hays, Walter Smith,
and Richard Robinson. They responded to a request by the Argentine
meteorological service for aviation-type forecast products generated
by the National Centers for Environmental Prediction, the United
Kingdom Meteorological Office, and the European Centre for Medium-Range
Weather Forecasts to the Argentine meteorological service. The
team arranged for delivery of all the forecasts and maintained
a watch on the communications lines to Argentina.
According to Lloyd Irvin, Chief of the Operations Support and
Performance Monitoring Branch, "our tasks are to ensure that
the products requested are available, distribute the forecast
data to Argentina's Servicio Meteorológico Nacional, and
maintain contact with them to make sure the requirements are met."
A German-owned vessel, the Magdalena Oldendorff, ran into impassable
ice on June 11 after delivering supplies to a Russian research
base. Two ships, one from South Africa and the other from Argentina,
were dispatched to help before increasingly bad winter weather
made that impossible. The South African vessel, the Agulhas, completed
its mission Monday, July 1, after rescue teams on its two helicopters
finished ferrying 88 Russian scientists and crew members trapped
on the Magdalena Oldendorff. The Argentine ship, an icebreaker,
was scheduled to arrive on July 7 to clear a path and make way
for the trapped vessel. For a news report, click
here.
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NWS Launches New Employee Orientation Program
Employees new to the National Weather Service now have an arsenal
of information at their fingertips thanks to an employee orientation
program designed to familiarize new employees with the organization's
structure and operations. "Two key features of this initiative
are the Buddy Program and the new Web site," said Harriet
Hartman, Management Analyst in the Office of the Chief Financial
Officer. The Buddy Program helps new employees become adjusted
to their new offices more quickly, while the Web site provides
one-stop-shop-access to information about the NWS and our operations
at Headquarters and the field."
The New Employee Orientation Program was developed in cooperation
with the National Weather Service Employees Organization (NWSEO)
by a team of Headquarters and field employees. The process of
developing the program involved looking at the needs of new employees
and existing programs offered by other line offices. This program
augments the NOAA new employee orientation program by helping
new NWS employees learn NWS's mission and core values; develop
a sense of pride in the role NWS plays as America's weather service,
recognize the value of their job to the organization, and identify
and use the various resources available within the NWS. Click
here to visit the new
employee orientation home page.
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WFO Great Falls Hosts a Job Shadow
The Great Falls, MT, Weather Forecast Office (WFO) played host
to job shadow, Margaret Houge
last month. Houge, a fourth grade school teacher at the Lewis
and Clark Elementary School in Great Falls, won the shadow opportunity
through a grant awarded by the Great Falls School District. Houge
says that she chose the National Weather Service because she wanted
to learn more about weather and feel more comfortable teaching
that portion of her curriculum.
Houge shadowed the WFO staff during a busy week. A late snow
and rain storm brought the drought-stricken rivers in north central
Montana above their banks. So, Warning Coordination Meteorologist
(WCM) Rick Dittmann, forecaster and Incident Meteorologist (IMET)
Bernie Meier and Houge toured streams and rivers in several counties
documenting stages to update hydrologic records. Houge accompanied
Dittman to a school talk and a FEMA-sponsored exercise. She also
accompanied Senior Service Hydrologist Gina Loss to a monthly
drought task force meeting hosted by Montana's Lieutenant Governor,
Carl Ohs. Houge also spent time with the forecast staff learning
how they gather data and implement that information into the forecast
process.
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NOAA Norman: "Gab at the Grill"
The Norman, OK, Storm Prediction Center (SPC) and National Severe
Storms Laboratory (NSSL) Employees Association has scheduled its
first ever "Gab at the Grill" event for July 11, 2002,
from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. The association purchased a grill
for use at the facility and on planned dates will cook up burgers
for $1 for members, $3 for non-members. Employees are encouraged
to bring a blanket or just sit on the lawn and picnic tables.
This offers a good opportunity to chat with NSSL/SPC staff in
a social gathering. Students and their mentors are welcome to
attend. No advance reservations are requiredjust show up
and enjoy!
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Central Region Hosts Golf Tournament
The 17th Annual Central Region/NWS Golf Association Golf Tournament
was held in Des Moines, IA, June 24-28, 2002. A total of 40 NWS
golfers attended, representing 17 states. Non-golfers who attended
raised the total to about 55. Tournament host Jerry Adams of the
Des Moines Weather Forecast Office made all the arrangements at
Waveland, Blank, and Willow Creek golf courses. He also arranged
lodging/hospitality at a Best Inn & Suites located across
the road from Willow Creek Golf Course. Three ladies from Des
Moines kindly escorted non-golfing ladies and children on some
local Des Moines sightseeing activities.
Weather conditions during the week, in general, were favorable
for the golfers, although it was very warm with temperatures above
90 each day. There were some scattered thunderstorms around early
Wednesday morning but they moved away in time for the first tee
time at 7:30 a.m.
Information on the dates and location of the 2003 tournament
will be distributed this fall. Contact Brian Hahn (brian.hahn@noaa.gov)
to get on the mailing list.
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Employee Milestones
Click here to see NEW
APPOINTMENTS/TRANSFERS to NWS through June 30, 2002
Click here to see RETIREMENTS/DEPARTURES
from NWS through June 30, 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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