SETI public: Fw: SEC-Letter

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Wed Sep 24 2003 - 18:17:39 PDT

  • Next message: LARRY KLAES: "SETI public: The Cosmos 1 Solar Sail Mission"

    ----- Original Message -----
    From: Space Environment Center
    Sent: Wednesday, September 24, 2003 12:58 PM
    To: sec-announcement-send_at_dawn.sec.noaa.gov
    Subject: SEC-Letter

    Dear Friend,

    The following describes Space Environment Center's unfortunate financial
    situation. For the coming fiscal year, the House Committee-recommended
    funding creates a huge shortfall, and the Senate Committee's
    recommendation implies no support for space weather service at all this
    year. Possibly a new service would be established elsewhere in the
    government, but that is uncertain at this point.

    We thought you would like to know.

    Ernest Hildner and the staff of SEC

    ========================================================================
    U.S. SPACE WEATHER SERVICE IN DEEP TROUBLE

    SUMMARY
    For Fiscal Year 2004, starting October 1, 2003, the House Appropriations
    Bill for Commerce, Justice, and State continues Space Environment
    Center's funding at $5.2 M (a reduction of 40% below the FY02 level).
    Worse, the FY04 Senate Appropriations Bill zeroes Space Environment
    Center and all space weather in NOAA, so services, data and
    observations, and archiving would all disappear if the final
    appropriation is at the Senate level. At the House funding level,
    starting October 1 SEC will rapidly lose about half its staff,
    negatively affecting its ability to serve the Nation with operational
    products, data collection, and R&D. Unless the appropriation level for
    Space Environment Center is restored to the level of the President's
    FY04 Budget Request, $8.3 million, the Nation's civilian space weather
    service is in trouble. At the President's requested funding level,
    Space Environment Center can almost return to FY02 level of services,
    data, and R&D.

    BACKGROUND
    NOAA's Space Environment Center in Boulder, Colorado, provides a range
    of services to the Nation related to space weather phenomena. Among
    other activities, the Center is the unique provider of real-time
    monitoring and forecasting of solar and geophysical events, it conducts
    research in solar-terrestrial physics, and it develops techniques for
    forecasting solar and geophysical disturbances. That is, Space
    Environment Center is the Nation's space weather service, monitoring and
    predicting conditions in space, much as the National Weather Service
    does for meteorological weather.

    SEC jointly operates the Space Weather Operations Center with the U.S.
    Air Force and serves as the national and world warning center for
    disturbances that can affect people and equipment working in the space
    environment. It is the government's official source for alerts and
    warnings of disturbances. Customers include DoD, NASA, FAA, airlines,
    operators of electric power grids, communicators, satellite operators,
    the National Space Weather Program, and commercial providers of
    value-added space weather services. Partnering with researchers funded
    by NSF, NASA, and the DoD, Space Environment Center is the place where
    much of the nation's $100s of millions annual investment in the National
    Space Weather Program and in space physics research is applied for the
    benefit of commerce, defense, NASA spaceflight, and individual
    taxpayers.

    SEC's appropriation lines can be found in the Department of Commerce,
    National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Office of
    Oceanic and Atmospheric Research portion of the Budget.

    In the omnibus appropriations Bill for FY 2003, the SEC received a
    severe cut to its budget of about 40%, with no explanation for the
    reduction. One-time funding additions have kept SEC afloat in FY2003.
    The President's Budget request is $8.3 million for SEC in FY2004 (an
    amount consistent with its past budgetary levels), but the House
    Commerce-Justice-State Appropriations Committee provides only $5.2
    million, or roughly 40% less than the amount necessary to maintain SEC
    at its current operational effectiveness. Again for FY04, no
    explanatory text was included in the Committee Report to explain this
    reduction, and it far exceeds the 18 % reduction below request meted out
    to NOAA Research overall and the 1% reduction to National Weather
    Service's request. The Bill has not yet been acted upon by the full
    House. The Senate Appropriations Committee explains its termination of
    space weather in NOAA in the Report accompanying its
    Commerce-Justice-State Bill as follows.
    The full text of the Senate Report may be found at
    http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/cpquery/T?&report=sr144&dbname=cp108&amp

    Solar observation. - The "Atmospheric" in NOAA does not extend to the
    astral. Absolutely no funds are provided for solar observation. Such
    activities are rightly the bailiwick of the National Aeronautics and
    Space Administration and the Air Force.

    Needless to say, there is no evidence to suggest that NASA and the Air
    Force agree that one or the other, or both, should operate the Nation's
    civilian space weather service.

    CONCLUSION
    Unless SEC's appropriation level is increased in Conference, the best
    outlook is that Space Environment Center shrinks to less than half its
    capability (House mark), and the worst is that space weather will
    disappear from NOAA (Senate mark). In this case, the Nation's space
    weather service will have to be reconstituted in some other agency, at
    greater cost and lesser capability, to meet the Nation's needs.

    **************************************************
    Ernest Hildner
    Director, Space Environment Center Tel: 303-497-3311
    Manager, NOAA Space Weather Program Fax: 303 497-3645
    325 Broadway, Boulder, CO 80305 www.sec.noaa.gov


  • Next message: LARRY KLAES: "SETI public: The Cosmos 1 Solar Sail Mission"

    This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.6 : Wed Sep 24 2003 - 18:30:01 PDT