The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Schumer: better weather satellites needed

- ByMichael Balsamo

NEW YORK >> U. S. Sen. Charles Schumer is warning that a lack of funding to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s budget could lead to big problems with the nation’s weather satellites when the next big storm hits.

TheNewYork­Democrat said current congressio­nal appropriat­ion bills won’t provide enough funding for the agency, and he warned that storms like Hurricane Joaquin show the need to upgrade and maintain the nation’s fleet of satellites.

“It is just plain dumb to cut hundreds of millions from our weather satellite system just when catastroph­ic storms are getting more extreme and more frequent,” he said.

Schumer said underfundi­ng in the bills will mean there will be only one polar- orbiting weather satellite scanning the Earth to help predict storms. Currently, two satellites continuous­ly scan the planet, from north to south, providing data on atmospheri­c winds and moisture.

But the funding cut to NOAA’s budget will put one of the satellites out of commission, he said. It was not immediatel­y clear when that would happen.

The federal government is expected to eventually have a replacemen­t satellite operating, though there would be a gap of at least a year, beginning in 2016, before a new satellite could be launched, Schumer said.

He said federal officials have warned that the gap would likely impact their ability to predict major storms, like Joaquin and Superstorm Sandy.

“Though high above earth, they protect us on the ground,” Schumer said of the satellites. “Whether it is a big city, a small town or even a farm, accurate forecasts impact our lives, our economy and our futures. Wemust work to ensure these satellites are repaired and replaced on a regular basis.”

President Barack Obama has proposed $380 million for the new weather satellites. The Senate bill includes $135 million and the House version contains zero funding for the equipment.

The satellites mainly provide informatio­n to generate forecasts that predict weather and storms about seven days in advance. SMITHVILLE, MO. >> The night before Bethany Hughes started on the Pacific Crest Trail, a 2,650-mile hike fromMexico to Canada, she was so wired that she kept rifling through her bags.

Everyone else was asleep, but Hughes thought a “real” backpacker knew where to find anything she needed. So she kept pulling out gear, then repacking it. Over and over, all night.

Eventually, another hiker said, “You’re like a 5-yearold the night before Christmas,” and her trail name of “Fidgit” was born. It has never fit better. Five years later, the 29-year- old with the curious inability to sit still is preparing to depart on her next daring expedition: She will attempt to become the first documented woman to travel the length of the Americas — from Ushuaia, Argentina, to Barrow, Alaska — entirely by non-motorized means. The 20,000-mile trek will begin in December and take an estimated five years to complete.

Along the way, Hughes plans to spend time in local villages and bear witness to their way of life, promoting education, opportunit­ies for women and other social issues.

“I really want to inspire

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