Being a Floridian , I was very shocked to find out that the director of the Hurricane Center was let go because he let US know that we didn't have the use of the Super tracker Satallite. I was happy to run across this :
On July 13th, Chairmen Bart Gordon and John Dingell, along with
Subcommittee Chairmen Brad Miller, Nick Lampson, and Bart Stupak wrote to NOAA Administrator Admiral Lautenbacher
requesting documents and records relating to the bizarre controversy
surrounding Tropical Prediction Center Director X. William Proenza.
Chairman Bart Stupak of the Committee on Energy and Commerce
Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations commented at the time:
“The initial refusal by NOAA General Counsel to allow our staff to
interview Mr. Proenza’s immediate supervisors raises suspicions that
someone in the Administration does not want us to find out the true
reasons for this management debacle. Our preliminary work seems to
indicate that Mr. Proenza is another victim of retaliation by the
Administration for speaking out on issues that Congress and the
American people need to hear. I am happy to join my colleagues on the
Science and Technology Committee in a long-term inquiry into the
management of NOAA and this important facility.” On July 19th, the
Science Committee held their first hearing on the matter.
Today Subcommittee Chairmen Brad Miller and Nick Lampson stand up for the Director:
Chairmen Request Ousted National Hurricane Center Director Be Returned to Southern Region
(Washington, DC) In deepening their look at recent controversy at
the Tropical Prediction Center (TPC/NHC), chairmen of two House Science
& Technology Subcommittees have requested that the center’s
director be returned to a position he held prior to running the TPC.
Investigations and Oversight Subcommittee Chairman Brad Miller
(D-NC) and Energy & Environment Chairman Nick Lampson (D-TX) have
sent a letter to National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administrator Admiral
Conrad Lautenbacher requesting that if Mr. William Proenza is
permanently removed as TPC director that be returned to his post as
head of the Southern Region of the National Weather Service instead of
being made training chief of the little-noticed Office of Climate,
Water and Weather Services. The Chairmen wrote that Mr. Proenza served
the Southern Region with great distinction and the position remains
vacant.
In the letter, the Chairman said it appeared Proenza had been
treated with little fairness when removed from his post in early July.
These two subcommittees held a joint hearing on this topic, July
19.
Today’s letter also said that documents provided after that hearing
revealing that NOAA officials had planned to move Mr. Proenza to the
Office of Climate, Water and Weather Services before undertaking any
evaluation of his work, and even if the evaluation revealed no
“mismanagement” by Mr. Proenza. The main reason given was his
“misrepresentation” of the impact of the loss of the QuikSCAT
satellite.
“We already received testimony that the White House was very upset
with Mr. Proenza raising concerns about the possible loss of the
QuikSCAT satellite before a replacement had been developed,” Chairman
Lampson said. “We don’t want this extremely talented public employee
consigned to NOAA’s backwaters because he spoke publicly about the
potential loss of a critical satellite.”
The chairmen pointed out that Mr. Proenza was not allowed to respond
to the report of the assessment team sent to evaluate the Center’s
operations until after Admiral Lautenbacher received an “action plan”
for responding to the report.
“Mr. Proenza took this job only because of your personal entreaty,”
read the Chairmen’s letter to Admiral Lautenbacher. “Many of the
recommendations for change in the operations of the Center made in the
assessment team’s report were consistent with the initiatives that Mr.
Proenza had already launched, such as the introduction of improved
graphical tropical weather outlooks and greater linkages with the
hurricane research community. And Mr. Proenza’s controversial
statements about effects of the possible demise of QuikSCAT have
motivated NOAA to begin the first real planning for the replacement of
this satellite after years of documented concerns from the TPC and
other NOAA staff.”
Based on their investigation and testimony at the hearing, the two
chairmen said the Subcommittees also had reason to question some
statements in that report central to the recommendation that Mr.
Proenza be removed as TPC Director and the thoroughness and purpose of
the assessment.
“The assessment team either did not have the time or the inclination
to obtain a full set of facts before drawing the conclusions that it
did,” the chairmen wrote. They noted a specific incident in which the
team alleged that Mr. Proenza had held media interviews in the middle
of the hurricane center, disrupting its work, although Mr. Proenza
stated that the interviews were arranged by public affairs staff from
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).”
The chairmen’s letter to Admiral Lautenbacher
was followed by two other letters (linked below) requesting documents
relating to the media interviews held during the assessment team’s
visit to the TPC; the initial selection of Mr. Proenza to be head of
the TPC; the selection and direction given to the TPC assessment team;
and the report itself.
To read the complete letter to requesting additional documents from Admiral Lautenbacher click
here.
To read the complete letter to Secretary Gutierrez about the findings of the operational assessment team click
here.
For more information on the joint hearing, click here.
http://www.speaker.gov/blog/?p=663