NOAA03-R299-4
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Terry F. Landsvork and Pat Slattery
8/14/03
NOAA News Releases 2003
NOAA Home Page
NOAA Public Affairs

AUBURN RESIDENT DARYL OBERMEYER HONORED FOR CONTRIBUTIONS
TO NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE VOLUNTEER OBSERVER PROGRAM

Recognizing 26 years of dedication, the NOAA National Weather Service has named rural Auburn, Neb., resident Daryl Obermeyer as a 2003 recipient of the agency’s John Campanious Holm Award for outstanding service in the Cooperative Weather Observer program. The award is the agency’s second most prestigious, and only 19 are presented this year to deserving cooperative weather observers from around the country. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is part of the U.S. Department of Commerce.

Meteorologist in Charge Steve Schurr of the Omaha Weather Forecast Office will present the award during a ceremony yet to be scheduled. Terry F. Landsvork of the Omaha office nominated Obermeyer for the award.

The National Weather Service Cooperative Weather Observer Program has given scientists and researchers continuous observational data since the program’s inception more than 100 years ago. Today, more than 11,000 volunteer observers participate in the nationwide program to provide daily reports on temperature, precipitation and other weather factors.

Many of the cooperative stations have been collecting weather data from the same location for more than a century; in some cases, several generations of a family have given up vacations and braved all kinds of extreme conditions to report weather conditions. Most observers record precipitation and temperature data. Obermeyer became the official observer at the Auburn 5ESE station in July 1977, providing daily precipitation, temperature and Little Nemaha River stage data to the Weather Service.

Some observers also record or report additional information such as soil temperature, evaporation and wind movement, agricultural data, water equivalent of snow on the ground, river stages and lake levels. This data is invaluable in learning more about droughts, floods, and heat and cold waves. The information is also used in agricultural planning and assessment, engineering, utilities planning and more.

Why do they do it? Some simply have a real interest in weather. Others see their service as a civic duty.

The National Weather Service usually provides and maintains the equipment used in the climatic and hydrologic networks. At the end of each month, observers mail their records to the National Climatic Data Center for publication in “Climatological Data” or “Hourly Precipitation Data,” both published by the NCDC.

Satellites, high-speed computers, mathematical models, and other technological breakthroughs have brought great benefits to the nation in terms of better forecasts and warnings. But without the century-long accumulation of accurate weather observations taken by volunteer observers, scientists could not begin to adequately describe the climate of the United States.

Like fine wine, weather records become more valuable with age. Long and continuous records provide an accurate “picture” of a locale’s normal weather, and give climatologists and others a basis for predicting future trends. These data are invaluable for scientists studying floods, droughts and heat and cold waves.

The first extensive network of cooperative stations was set up in the 1890s as a result of an 1890 act of Congress that established the U.S. Weather Bureau. Many of the stations have even longer histories. John Campanious Holm’s weather records, taken without benefit of instruments in 1644 and 1645, were the earliest known recorded observations in the United States.

Many historic figures have also maintained weather records, including Benjamin Franklin, George Washington and Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson maintained an almost unbroken record of weather observations between 1776 and 1816, and Washington took weather observations just a few days before he died. The Jefferson and Holm awards are named for these weather observation pioneers.

NOAA is dedicated to enhancing economic security and national safety through the prediction and research of weather and climate-related events and providing environmental stewardship of our nation’s coastal and marine resources. To learn more about NOAA, please visit the Web site at: http://www.noaa.gov.

On the Web:

NOAA: http://www.noaa.gov

National Weather Service: http://www.nws.noaa.gov

Cooperative Weather Observer program: http://www.nws.noaa.gov/om/coop/

National Climatic Data Center: http://lwf.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/ncdc.html