Letters of Congratulations
From Paul A. Roelle, on behalf of the Office of the Federal Coordinator for Meteorological Services and Supporting Research:
Office of the Federal Coordinator
For Meteorological Services and Supporting Research
1325 East West Highway, SSMC2, Suite 7130
Silver Spring, Maryland 20910
December 3, 2014
Steve Koch
Director, National Severe Storms Laboratory
120 David L. Boren Blvd.
Norman, OK 73072
Dear Dr. Koch,
About a year ago we celebrated the 50th anniversary of the Office of the Federal Coordinator for Meteorological Services and Supporting Research. It is now my profound privilege and honor to acknowledge and celebrate the National Severe Storms Laboratory's 50 years' of accomplishment and our 50-year partnership. NSSL's superb work in proving the potential of Doppler weather radar and developing the operational algorithms to realize that potential was crucial to the success of the tri-agency NEXRAD program and the demonstrated capability of the WSR-88D to save lives. On-going developments by NSSL, including dual polarization, have insured that the WSR-88D remains the world's premier weather radar. In addition to developing first-rate storm observing capabilities, NSSL has continuously advanced the understanding of severe storms and our capability to forecast them.
Our partnership continues with the development of phased array technology. NSSL's innovative conversion of a Navy SPY-1A radar into the National Weather Radar Testbed provided the capability to study storms more carefully, to demonstrate value of rapid and adaptive scanning, and to develop the concepts of multifunctionality.
Going forward, we are excited about continuing our partnership with NSSL as we plan a follow-on to the SPY-1 A NWRT and explore the new and exciting capabilities that active, dual polarization phased array radar will provide to the weather enterprise and the American people it protects.
Congratulations to the all those who have contributed to the NSSL mission over the last 50 years. If history is any indication of what we can expect in the future, the next 50 years of NSSL accomplishments will be awesome.
Sincerely,
PAUL A. ROELLE, Colonel, Ph.D., USAF
DEPFOR Federal Programs & Interagency Coordination, Air Force Weather
On behalf of the OFCM Team
From Craig N. McLean, Acting Assistant Administrator, NOAA Office of Oceanic & Atmospheric Research:
United States Department of Commerce
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Silver Spring, MD 20910
Office of Oceanic Atmospheric Research
Nov 28, 2014
Dr. Steven Koch
Director
National Severe Storms Laboratory
120 David L. Boren Blvd.
Norman, Oklahoma 73072
Dear Steve,
Congratulations to the National Severe Storms Laboratory on its 50th anniversary. Americans and the world have benefited remarkably from atmospheric science advances that have resulted from decades of NSSL-led research. NSSL and its partners have pioneered numerous advances since the lab's establishment in 1964. The NSSL extended family has much to look back on: increasing our understanding of severe weather, developing and refining vital observing technologies, developing new methodologies for disseminating information and warnings, and leading the way in integrating social sciences into the forecast and warning process.
We are fortunate to have so many world-class researchers at NSSL, and we're doubly blessed to have such strong partnerships with the University of Oklahoma, the Cooperative Institute for Mesoscale Meteorological Studies and the National Weather Service.
I regret that I cannot be with you all to celebrate this milestone, but I look forward to my next visit, when I can acknowledge in person the great debt this Nation has to the countless people who have taken to heart NSSL's mission, to enhance NOAA's capabilities to provide accurate and timely forecasts and warnings of hazardous weather events.
Congratulations!
Sincerely,
Craig N. McLean
Acting Assistant Administrator