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NOAA's NWS Focus July
21, 2003 |
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| DART
buoys like the one pictured are becoming the
responsibility of NWS's National Data Buoy Center.
Read
the story here.
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| Director's
Dialog: Future of Center Weather Service Units?
:What
are the chances that the CWSU program will avoid significant
consolidation/reorganization as recently proposed by the
FAA?
William
Bobb, Center Weather Service Unit (CWSU), Denver
Thank
you for your question.
The NWS has not received an official proposal from the
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to consolidate or
reorganize the Center Weather Service Units (CWSUs). The
FAA requested our participation in a review of the CWSU
program. In April and May, a joint FAA/NWS team conducted
a functional audit of the CWSUs. The team interviewed NWS
meteorologists, and FAA managers and supervisors at seven
Air Route Traffic Control Centers and three consolidated
Terminal Radar Approach Control facilities. A functional
audit report documenting the findings of this team has been
sent to the each NWS region headquarters.
A second joint FAA/NWS team will be assembled to write
a mission statement and a concept of operations for the
CWSUs using data from the functional audit report and the
National Transportation Safety Board. The team will consider
new technology, current and future NWS architectures, current
and projected FAA budget, and the services and products
required to meet FAA responsibilities. The results of the
team's activities will be forwarded to FAA and NWS management
for a final decision. The NWS Regional Directors will keep
you informed as this process evolves.
Jack Kelly
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| Electrical
Incident Disrupts Training Center Schedule
On July 2, 2003,
an electrical power incident caused damage to electrical systems
and the AWIPS equipment at the National Weather Service Training
Center in Kansas City, MO. Although there was a small fire,
Training Center personnel acted quickly and there was no damage
to the building and no one was injured.
The extent of the damage to electrical and AWIPS systems
is still being assessed.
"While this event did impact the offering of training
courses for the remainder of FY 03, we remain aware of the
important role training plays in the NWS mission and are
making every effort to remedy the situation in time for
the Training Center to offer the full FY 04 class schedule,"
said Eli Jacks, Acting Director, NWS Training Division.
In the meantime, employees who have scheduled training
should watch their e-mail for potential schedule changes,
or call the NWS Training Center at 816-880-9673 if they
have any questions.
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| Earth
Observation Summit Planned
NOAA is sponsoring
the International Earth Observation Summit (EOS), scheduled
for July 30-August 2, 2003, in Washington, DC.
The summit will bring together about 25 nations to build
an international, comprehensive, integrated and sustained
Earth Observation system.
Vice Admiral Conrad C. Lautenbacher, Jr., U.S. Navy (Ret.),
Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere and
NOAA Administrator will lead the briefing along with senior
representatives from NASA and the U.S. Department of Energy.
Scheduled speakers include: Secretary of Commerce Don
Evans; Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham; Secretary of
State Colin Powell; NASA Administrator Sean OKeefe; Science
Advisor to the President, John Marburger; and White House
Council on Environmental Quality Chairman James Connaughton.
The aim of the summit is to develop a new Earth Observing
system providing scientific data needed to address important
global economic, social and scientific challenges, and sustainable
development.
See the Summit
web page for more information.
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| NWS
Takes First Steps Toward Air Quality Forecast Capability
Following a
2002 Congressional mandate, the NWS is implementing a National
Air Quality Forecast (AOF) Capability. The Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) and NOAA are jointly developing a
forecasting tool which will predict air quality for communities
across the Nation. The new capability will provide hourly
gridded forecast guidance for next day ground-level ozone.
This guidance will provide more accurate predictions of poor
air quality, in time for people to take action to limit harmful
effects.
This summer, the National Centers for Environmental Prediction
(NCEP) is integrating and testing a NOAA/EPA-developed air
quality model system as a first step towards planned operational
deployment over the northeastern United States in September
2004. Currently NCEP is testing the model on a daily basis.
Evaluation of these test results will be used to refine
the system that will undergo summer 2004 real-time testing
leading to operational deployment.
"Under the current concept of operations, NWS will issue
centrally-produced numerical Air Quality predictions as
guidance," said Paula Davidson, AQF Program Manager with
the Office of Science and Technology. "This guidance will
serve as a standard tool, ultimately nationwide, for public
and private state and local forecasters who provide tailored
forecasts for their communities, and EPA who provides interpreted
air quality health indices and warnings."
The program involves partnering
with EPA, which provides national
emission inventory data to NWS for numerical weather
prediction models. The new integrated system will combine
the NWSs weather forecasting with EPAs information on atmospheric
pollution to provide next-day, hour-by-hour forecasts of
air quality twice every day.
The capability under development is an integrated system
linking NWSs numerical weather prediction models to the
NOAA/EPA-developed Community Mesoscale Air Quality (CMAQ)
system to provide next day guidance, at hourly intervals,
at the resolution of NWSs operational mesoscale model -
currently NCEPs Eta model at 12-kilometer resolution.
Read the previous NOAA's NWS Focus
article on Air Quality Forecasts here.
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| Tsunami
Buoy Transition Effort Progressing
Transfer of
operational responsibility for a network of buoys used in
tsunami detection to the NWS National Data Buoy Center (NDBC)
is a step closer to completion.
NDBC, with assistance
from NOAAs Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory (PMEL)
completed a servicing cruise for the Deep-ocean
Assessment and Reporting of Tsunamis (DART) project
in June, and the transition effort is on course to be done
before the end of fiscal year 2003.
As part of the U.S.
National Tsunami Hazard Mitigation Program (NTHMP),
DART is an ongoing effort to maintain and improve the detection
of tsunamis in the open ocean and provides subsequent warnings
to communities in danger. DART was developed by PMEL.
Paul Moersdorf, NDBC Director, noted the significance
of the DART system.
"Were proud to be supporting the National Tsunami Hazard
Program. PMELs team developed a very capable measurement
system and we at NDBC are glad to have the opportunity to
provide data for more accurate tsunami warnings to the U.S.
Pacific coast states."
DART consists of buoys and underwater pressure sensors
and is essential in fulfilling NOAA's national responsibility
for tsunami hazard and warning forecasts which will reduce
the loss of life and property in the Pacific Northwest,
Alaska, and Hawaiian Coastal communities, Moersdorf said.
DART also will reduce false alarms which result in high
economic costs for unnecessary evacuations.
The transition of operational responsibility for the DART
network from PMEL to NDBC began in the summer of 2001. A
transition plan was developed and NDBC staff began to work
with PMEL staff to get familiar with the DART system.
In the summer of 2002, a team of NDBC
and PMEL personnel departed from Kodiak, AK, to service
the five North Pacific DART Systems. Moersdorf said by the
end of the cruise, the NDBC team was confident in their
ability to perform all operations related to recovery, deployment,
and refurbishment of a DART system.
The second phase of the transition began in early 2003.
For the first step of this second phase, NDBC accepted logistical
responsibility for the network, including the purchasing
of equipment and material necessary to maintain the DART
network. NDBC has built up its inventory to allow for the
refurbishment efforts in the shop environment.
The current standard DART surface buoy has a design life
of one year and the sea-floor pressure package has a life
of two years. The system has proven to be reliable with
a cumulative data return of 96 percent since 1998.
PMEL began prototype system development in 1995. Presently
six buoy systems make up the DART array. Three are located
south of the Aleutian Islands in Alaska, two off the Washington
and Oregon coast and one in the Eastern Equatorial Pacific.
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| Group
Gets Kudos for Improving Equipment Reliability
Central Region
Electronic Technicians were recently honored with an
award citation for improving equipment reliability and
cutting costs because failed equipment parts were promptly
returned for repair and restocking at NWS's National Reconditioning
Center (NRC).
"Kudos to all Central Region Electronic Technicians,"
said Dennis McCarthy, Central Region Director. "Recently,
weve achieved a second record zero level of overdue parts
according to the Consolidated Logistics System report. This
kind of teamwork symbolizes the kind of initiative by our
employees that really makes a difference. Now, defective
equipment is returned to the NRC in less than 30 days in
our region. Congratulations to everyone involved."
A supply of spare equipment parts is critical to maintaining
NWS equipment. Typically NWS Electronic Technicians repair
equipment using parts from NWS''''s National Logistics Supply
Center (NLSC). Defective parts are returned to the NRC to
be repaired and restocked at NLSC. A limited number of spare
parts are available at NLSC, so it is important to return
failed parts promptly to NRC for repair and restocking.
"A couple of years ago, it typically took 90 days or more
for Weather Forecast Offices to return used parts to NRC,"
noted Vi Capell of Central Region Headquarters. "Improving
this turnaround time makes more parts available at NLSC
and ensures there is a reliable supply of spare parts available
to maintain an effective parts pipeline."
According to Roland Devoe, Central Region Electronics
Program Manager, "Our team effort really paid off in terms
of reducing costs for emergency repairs and increasing NLSC
parts availability."
Technicians throughout the NWS have increased their focus
on turning around defective parts to the NRC notes Devoe.
"A 50 percent reduction has been achieved nationally in
time to return parts to NRC."
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| NWS
Offers Field Forecasters a New Teletraining Course
A new teletraining
course on digital tropical cyclone wind forecasts is being
offered by NWSs Office of Climate, Water, and Weather Service
(OCWWS).
The course titled "Populating Weather Forecast Office
Wind Grids Using Forecast Guidance from Tropical Cyclone
Centers," provides field forecasters guidelines for populating
Interactive Forecast Preparation System/National Digital
Forecast Database wind grids when tropical cyclones affect
their County Warning Area.
The teletraining is taught by the Tropical Prediction
Centers (TPC's) Science and Operations Officer (SOO) Rick
Knabb from the TPC offices in Florida.
"The offerings have been extremely popular with local
office staff as this is an opportunity to interact with
TPC directly as we all continue to work through methodologies
and practices of gridded forecasts," said Brian Motta, OCWWS
Training Division, COMET Branch, IFPS Professional Development
Series Executive Producer. He added that more than 165 people
have already taken the teletraining from more than 65 sites.
On July 22, 2003, the grids issued by TPC for the WFOs
increase to 6-hourly frequency from 12 hourly. Motta said
Warning Coordination Meteorologists will need to educate
their customers about how extended-range tropical cyclone
forecasts will appear in the grids, and the teletraining
should help.
Those interested in downloading the presentation should
check with their SOO or IFPS focal point for information
or contact Brian.Motta@noaa.gov.
For information on registering for this course, see the
student guide at: http://www-md.fsl.noaa.gov/IFPS/IFPSTrainingGuide-TPCsTCMGrids.html.
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| Also
On the Web...Claudette
The Corpus Christi, TX, Weather Forecast Office has created
a web page on the development of Hurricane Claudette, which
hit the Texas coast earlier in July. View the page and accompanying
photos taken by the forecast office staff here.
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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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