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NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE NOAA DISSEMINATION SYSTEMS. NWSRFS INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP KANSAS CITY KEN PUTKOVICH OCTOBER 22, 2003. NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE MISSION STATEMENT.
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NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICENOAA DISSEMINATION SYSTEMS NWSRFS INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP KANSAS CITY KEN PUTKOVICH OCTOBER 22, 2003
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICEMISSION STATEMENT • The National Weather Service (NWS) provides weather, hydrologic, and climatic forecasts and warnings for the United States, its territories, and adjacent waters and ocean areas, for the protection of life and property and the enhancement of the national economy. NWS data and products form a national information database and infrastructure which can be used by other government agencies, the private sector, the public and the global community. • To achieve this mission, the NWS will continue to: “Enhance dissemination and information exchange service”
DISSEMINATION Dissemination is the timely delivery of information from a source to a user. NWS information delivery is either: Routine – Weather, Hydrologic, Climatic Forecasts Emergency – All Hazard Warnings & Watches
MAJOR NWS DISSEMINATION SYSTEMS • NOAA Weather Wire Service (NWWS) • NOAA Weather Radio (NWR) • Emergency Managers Weather Information Network (EMWIN) • Internet Weather Information Network (IWIN) • Family of Services (FOS)
NOAA Weather Wire Service (NWWS) • Coverage: U.S., incl. AK. HI, & PR • Delivery Delay: Seconds • End User: Emergency Manager/Mass Media • User Cost: $150 per month • Product Type: Text and Graphics • Pros: Fast and reliable • Cons: Expensive
Emergency Managers Weather Information Network (EMWIN) • Coverage: GOES Satellite Footprint • Delivery Delay: Minutes • End User: Everyone • User Cost: $700 Initial • Product Type: All • Pros: Low cost • Cons: Timeliness
Internet Weather Information Network (IWIN) • Coverage: Global/Internet Access • Delivery Delay: Minutes • End User: Public, Emergency Managers • User Cost: ISP and PC • Product Type: All except audio • Pros: Low cost • Cons: Timely access
Family of Services (FOS • Coverage: Anywhere Telephone Available • Delivery Delay: Minutes • End User: Weather Industry/Research • User Cost: $ Thousands per product suite • Product Type: All NWS Products except audio • Pros: All products • Cons: Cost
AWIPS NOAAPort • Coverage: National • Delivery Delay: Minutes • End User: Weather Industry/Research • User Cost: $ Thousands • Product Type: All NWS products except audio • Pros: All Products • Cons: Cost
NOAA Weather Radio (NWR) • Coverage: 95% of U.S. population • Delivery Delay: Seconds • End User: Public/Emergency Mangers • User Cost: $40-100, one time for receiver • Product Type: Audio with alarm • Pros: Timely and reliable • Cons: Requires special receiver
NWR STATION ANTENNA TELEPHONE 5 WATT TO UHF RADIO CONSOLE 1000 WATT MICROWAVE LINK TRANSMITTER DIAL UP TELEPHONE ROAMS TELECOMMUNICATIONS TRANSMITTER SITE CONSOLE AT WFO
NWR STATION COST • TRANSMITTERS • $24 TO $44 THOUSAND • COMPLETE STATION • ALL INFRASTRUCTURE AVAILABLE - $50 THOUSAND • NO INFRASTRUCTURE AVAILABLE - $200 THOUSAND+ • O & M COST • $8 TO $14 THOUSAND PER YEAR
NWR RECEIVERS • AVAILABLE 2000 AND EARLIER • 20 BRANDS • 100 MODELS • STANDARD NWR, SAME NWR, MARINE, AIRCRAFT, AUTO/TRUCK, SCANNER, CB, AM/FM/MULTIBAND • AVAILABLE 2001 • FAMILY RADIO TRANSCEIVERS • RADAR DETECTORS • AVAILABLE 2003 • TELEVISION • FUTURE POTENTIAL • “SMART HOMES” • HOME SECURITY SYSTEMS • INTERNET RADIO
SYSTEM UPGRADESIN PROGRESS • REMOTE OFF AIR MONITORING (ROAMS) • CALLS WHEN TRANSMITTER FAILS • ALLOWS PERFORMANCE & AUDIO QUALITY QUERY • INTERFACED TO BROADCAST CONSOLE • MONITORS SAME BROADCAST • NATIONAL AUTOMATED MONITORING • ALL HAZARDS • DIRECT ACCESS FOR STATIONS AT NUCLEAR, CHEMICAL, BIOLOGICAL STORAGE FACILITIES • ACCESS FOR NATIONAL, STATE AND LOCAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT BROADCASTS VIA NEW AWIPS INTERFACE • MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEM • CENTRALIZED NWR DATABASE • COST AND PERFORMANCE MONITORING • SELECTIVE PUBLIC ACCESS VIA INTERNET
National Emergency Warning SystemInitiative • NEAR TERM ( 1 YEAR ) • IMPROVE NATIONAL AND LOCAL ACCESS TO NWS COLLECTION AND DISSEMINATION SYSTEMS • MID-TERM ( 1 - 5 YEARS ) • UPGRADE AND INTEGRATE NWS SYSTEMS TO IMPROVE PERFORMANCE AND PROVIDE SECURE, UNIVERSAL ACCESS FROM MULTIPLE LOCATIONS • LONG TERM (> 5 YEARS ) • PURSUE NEWER, MORE COST EFFECTIVE MEANS OF PROVIDING DIRECT, EFFECTIVE ALL-HAZARD WARNINGS TO THOSE MOST IMMEDIATELY AT RISK
USDA NWR PARTNERSHIPUSDA HAS $5 MILLION FOR GRANTS IN FY 2001 FOR NWR EXPANSION IN RURAL AREAS • COOPERATORS WITH TOWERS AND FACILITIES IN AREAS WITHOUT COVERAGE HAVE THEIR INITIATIVES FOR NEW NWR STATIONS APPROVED BY THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE • NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE APPROVED COOPERATORS APPLY TO USDA FOR GRANT FUNDING OF STATION EQUIPMENT AND INSTALLATION ($ 80K) • USDA APPROVED GRANTEE BUYS AND INSTALLS TRANSMITTER & ANTENNA AT APPROVED FACILITY • NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE LICENSES STATION & PROVIDES INSTALLATION SUPPORT • COOPERATOR TESTS AND DONATES OPERATING STATION TO THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE • NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE OPERATES AND MAINTAINS STATION
SYSTEM UPGRADESPROPOSED • STATION MODERNIZATION • NEW TRANSMITTERS AND EMERGENCY POWER • ENHANCE TELECOMMUNICATIONS TO TRANSMITTER • TEXT BROADCAST • ACCESS TO DEAF AND HARD OF HEARING • LOW COST NWWS/EMWIN BROADCAST • INTERNET BROADCAST • ACCESS TO ANY NWR BROADCAST ANYWHERE • WATCHES AND WARNINGS ON INTERNET RADIO
PROPOSED NWR INITIATIVESFY 2005-2009 • EXPANSION • 125 NEW STATIONS THRU NWS BUDGET • 150 NEW STATIONS THRU USDA GRANT PROGRAM AND PARTNERSHIPS • UPGRADES • 400 STATIONS REFURBISHED • TELECOMMUNICATIONS LINKS TO ALL NWR STATIONS CONVERTED TO DIGITAL SATELLITE • SATELLITE UPLINKS AT ALL NWS OFFICES AND CENTERS • OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE • PROVIDE O & M FOR ALL NEW (1995 TO 2009) STATIONS AND ALL NEW SATELLITE LINKS
DISABILITY ISSUES • AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT • TELECOMMUNICATIONS ACT OF 1996 • REHABILITATION ACT OF 1973
WARNING SYSTEMSFEATURES REQUIRED BY PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES • ALARMING DEVICES COMPATIBLE WITH IMPAIRMENT • WARNING PROVIDED IN TIMELY MANNER • WARNING EASILY UNDERSTOOD • WARNING HAS INFORMATION REQUIRED FOR ACTION • WARNING IS SPECIFIC AS TO EVENT • WARNING IS SPECIFIC AS TO LOCATION • BATTERY OR OTHER EMERGENCY POWER
SYSTEM THAT MOST MEETS NEEDS OF DISABLEDNOAA WEATHER RADIO • INEXPENSIVE, TIMELY, & RELIABLE • PROGRAMMABLE FOR LOCATION AND EVENT • ALARMS COMPATIBLE WITH IMPAIRMENT • AVAILABLE TO OVER 95% OF POPULATION • WARNING LEVELS & LEAD TIMES MEET VARIED NEEDS • OPERATES OFF SEVERAL EMERGENCY POWER SYSTEMS • HAS AUDIO AND VISUAL OUTPUTS • CAN ACTIVATE EXTERNAL WARNING DEVICES
REPORTS • “SAVING LIVES WITH AN ALL-HAZARD NETWORK” • PREPARED BY MULTI-AGENCY NATIONAL PARTNERSHIP FOR REINVENTING GOVERNMENT WORKING GROUP - PUBLISHED DECEMBER 1999 • HARDCOPY FROM NWS - NOAA • “EFFECTIVE HAZARDS WARNINGS” • PREPARED BY EXECUTIVE OFFICE WORKING GROUP ON NATIONAL DISASTER INFORMATION SERVICE - PUBLISHED NOVEMBER 2000 • AVAILABLE VIA INTERNET AT THE FOLLOWING ADDRESS: “http://www.nnic.noaa.gov/CENR/NDISrevOct27.pdf” • “WEATHER RADIO INTEREST AND AWARENESS” • PREPARED BY eBRAIN.CONSUMER RESEARCH - PUBLISHED August 2002 • AVAILABLE FROM THE CONSUMER ELECTRONICS ASSOCIATION • “NATIONAL STRATEGY FOR INTEGRATED PUBLIC WARNING POLICY AND CAPABILITY” • PREPARED BY THE PARTNERSHIP FOR PUBLIC WARNING - PUBLISH JANUARY- FEBRUARY 2003
WARNING SYSTEMSINFORMATION ON THE INTERNET • NWS Home Page - http://www.nws.noaa.gov • NWS Home Page - http://www.weather.gov • National Hurricane Center - http://www. nhc.noaa/om • NOAA Weather Radio (NWR) -http://www.nws.noaa.gov/nwr • Partnership for Public Warning - http://www.partnershipforpublicwarning.org