Hurricane Forecast Improvement Program Enhancement Act
Sponsored By: Senator Ted Budd
Introduced
Summary
Sharper hurricane forecasts and clearer warnings. This bill would refresh the Hurricane Forecast Improvement Program to speed research and testing across four areas: intensity and track prediction, inland and compound flooding plus storm surge, social and behavioral science for clearer warnings, and innovative observation tools and platforms.
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- Families and communities: Would aim to give residents clearer, probabilistic warnings about rapid intensity changes, storm surge, and inland flooding to help with faster evacuation and safety choices.
- Emergency managers and forecasters: Would require the Under Secretary to develop and transition probabilistic forecast tools, expand computing capacity including cloud resources, and improve operational models used for forecasting.
- Researchers, industry, and academia: Would award grants based on NOAA's 2019 Hurricane Forecast Improvement priorities, require coordination with the Social and Behavioral Sciences Subcommittee and other interagency groups, and require annual reports by June 1 through 2029 that include workforce plans and plans for transitioning prototype technologies into operations.
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Bill Overview
Analyzed Economic Effects
1 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
Better hurricane forecasts to protect households
This bill would require NOAA's Under Secretary to maintain a national Hurricane Forecast Improvement Program. The program would aim to reduce loss of life and property from hurricanes. It would focus on four areas: rapid changes in hurricane intensity and track with probabilistic hazard mapping; inland, compound flooding, and storm surge forecasts; adding social, behavioral, and economic science to improve risk communication; and testing and using new observation tools and sensors, including crewed and uncrewed systems and instruments on aircraft, vessels, and satellites. The Under Secretary would award research grants, implement priorities from NOAA's 2019 report, and coordinate with federal social and behavioral science groups. The bill would require expanding computing resources, including cloud computing, and moving probabilistic forecast research into operations. It would also require an annual report, due June 1 each year through 2029, prepared with the Defense Department, that lists missed mission causes, forecast requirements not tasked and why, workforce shortfalls for observational data collection, and the status of hurricane technology and plans to transition prototypes into operations. These requirements would take effect upon enactment.
Sponsors & CoSponsors
Sponsor
Ted Budd
NC • R
Cosponsors
There are no cosponsors for this bill.
Roll Call Votes
No roll call votes available for this bill.
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