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On Sun, 24 Apr 2005 23:21:51 GMT, George Patterson
wrote in jSVae.910$oD6.243@trndny07:: Andrew Gideon wrote: Unless the publicity points out that he's trying to *decrease* public safety for the benefit of certain very specific commercial interests. If it can then be shown that they've contributed to his campaign... Oh, it can be shown. One web site that I hit the other night when looking for the text of the bill contains a list of each contribution Accuweather made to him. Mostly small amounts, but they total over $3,000. Here's a quote: http://www.livejournal.com/users/rjwhite/ "It is not an easy prospect for a business to attract advertisers, subscribers or investors when the government is providing similar products and services for free," Santorum said. Here's a little more information on the topic: ------------------------------------------------------------------- AVflash Volume 11, Number 17a -- April 25, 2005 ------------------------------------------------------------------- FREE WX UNDER THREAT... The National Weather Service (NWS) would be restricted from offering any products to the public that are or could be provide by the commercial weather industry, under legislation introduced in the U.S. Senate recently by Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.). The "National Weather Services Duties Act of 2005" would "modernize the description of the National Weather Service's roles within the national weather enterprise," Santorum said, and essentially it would yank the popular NWS Web site off the Internet. The bill already has attracted opposition among those who value NWS products. http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#189634 ...AS PROVIDERS SEEK PAYMENT FOR SERVICE The effort seems to be driven by the NWS's recently revamped Web site, which makes weather data more easily available. AccuWeather, a private weather provider based in Pennsylvania, has been critical of the NWS and supportive of the bill to change it. AccuWeather spokesman Barry Myers told the Post the bill would improve public safety by making the weather service devote its efforts to hurricanes, tsunamis and other dangers, rather than duplicating products already available from the private sector. But NWS spokesman Ed Johnson said it doesn't work that way. http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#189635 This article seems to give Barry Myers a soapbox: http://www.wired.com/news/technology...w=wn_tophead_1 The commercial weather providers make more than $1 billion in revenue each year from sales to media, transportation companies, farmers and financial traders, according to Barry Myers, AccuWeather's executive vice president. Here is an account of attorney Barry Myers' political contributions: http://www.newsmeat.com/fec/bystate_...rs&first=Barry Here is an account of AccuWeather's President Joel Myers' political contributions: http://query.nictusa.com/cgi-bin/ind_detail/MYERS|JOEL+N+DR|STATE+COLLEGE|PA|16801|ACCU+WEATHE R/ Another story on the subject: http://www.rawstory.com/exclusives/b...eather_421.htm BAD WEATHER? Senator aiming to nix federal weather forecasts enjoyed AccuWeather money Some worry that bill is bad idea in wake of hurricanes By John Byrne | RAW STORY Editor A conservative Republican senator who proposed that federal meteorologists be forbidden from competing with companies such as AccuWeather and the Weather Channel, has received nearly $4,000 from AccuWeather's founder and executive vice president since 2000, RAW STORY has discovered. Sen. Rick Santorum (R-PA) introduced the bill last week. The senator's supporters (among them the founder and executive vice president of AccuWeather) note the bill provides an exemption that would allow organizations the National Hurricane Center from alerting the public to hazards. "The National Weather Service has not focused on what its core mission should be, which is protecting other people's lives and property," said Barry Myers, the Executive Vice President of AccuWeather told the Palm Beach Post Thursday. "It spends hundreds of millions of dollars a year, every day, producing forecasts of 'warm and sunny.'" Myers gave $1,000 to Santorum in the last election cycle. Santorum was the only senator Myers financially supported. AccuWeather's 15,000 clients include Post, which utilizes the firm's hurricane forecast maps on PalmBeachPost.com. The Post failed to include mention of Myers contributions. Myers' brother, Joel, founder, CEO and president of AccuWeather, has also given generously to Santorum over the years—more than $2,000 in the last election cycle alone. A spokesman for Florida's Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson was taken aback by Santorum's bill, questioning the intelligence of a bill that the senator believes might be dangerous in the wake of several hurricanes. "The weather service proved so instrumental and popular and helpful in the wake of the hurricanes," Nelson spokesman Dan McLaughlin told the Post. "How can you make an argument that we should pull it off the Net now? What are you going to do, charge hurricane victims to go online, or give them a pop-up ad?" In a release Apr. 14, Santorum said the bill was sorely needed. “With the support of my colleagues, we can pass this legislation to modernize the description of the National Weather Service’s roles within the national weather enterprise, so that it reflects today’s reality in which the National Weather Service and the commercial weather industry both play important parts in providing weather products and services to the nation,” Santorum said. AccuWeather's President compares himself to Edison, Ford, Disney, Turner, Trump, and Gates: http://wwwa.accuweather.com/company....bout#president President Dr. Joel N. Myers Founder, CEO and President of AccuWeather, Inc. Dr. Joel N. Myers is the man who transformed weather into an industry. As a graduate student of meteorology at Penn State University in 1962, Myers accepted his first consulting assignment to provide weather forecasting information to a Pennsylvania utility company. Thus began the fulfillment of a dream he had held since he was 11 years old, to help industry and consumers by providing weather forecasts and information of value, with his own weather company. Since that time, Dr. Myers has gone on to build the world’s best-known commercial weather service. Today, AccuWeather and AccuWeather.com are the most respected names in weather forecasting, a brand recognized by nearly every American. The company, which employs 400 professionals including 100 operational meteorologists (probably the most in one location, anywhere in the world), provides customized weather forecasting services to 15,000 clients worldwide, including international media, more than 180 of the Fortune 500, government agencies and private subscribers. A lifetime student and instructor of meteorology, Dr. Myers’ accomplishments include: Reworking the arcane science of meteorology in order to educate mass audiences to the forces of weather and how they impact everyday life. Advancing the very science of weather forecasting to provide media outlets and businesses worldwide with the most exact and timely weather forecasts available for them to use as a competitive advantage in their marketplace. Establishing weather information as a key content component in both traditional broadcasting and on the Internet. Prior to AccuWeather, weather was reported as an afterthought. Today, weather is often the news--due in part to Dr. Myers’ vision and forethought. Training an estimated 17% of all practicing meteorologists in the United States as of his retirement from teaching at Penn State. Pioneering ready-for-air color weather graphics for television stations and print-ready weather pages for newspapers. Today, more than 1000 individual television and radio stations and newspapers, plus leading news organizations like CNN, CNBC and MSNBC use AccuWeather as their weather source. Dr. Myers continues to innovate. The patent-pending Real Feel Temperature™, developed by Dr. Myers and other AccuWeather experts, as the only true indicator of how temperatures feel, is replacing the less accurate wind chill factor and heat index as the predominate means of how consumers understand the effect of temperatures. Over the past five years, Dr. Myers has established AccuWeather as the premier supplier of online weather information. AccuWeather.com receives about 4.5 million unique visitors, accessing 60 million pages each month. When these viewers are combined with the more than 1,200 other Internet sites that provide AccuWeather content, an estimated 70 million unique users view more than 700 million AccuWeather pages each month. Dr. Myers has authored more than 75 articles and papers on a wide range of technical and business subjects and has given hundreds of speeches and presentations. He has appeared On the ABC Nightly News, To Tell the Truth, Larry King Live and has been quoted in Time, Newsweek, U.S. News and World Report, National Geographic, The Economist, USA Today, Reader’s Digest, Forbes, Internet World and in more than 500 magazines and newspapers. As a weather broadcaster for 18 years, he has been seen on major media nationwide and is generally considered the nation’s most respected source on the business of meteorology and how it affects industry and consumers. He was dubbed "the most accurate man in weather" by the New York Times. Dr. Myers was recognized by Entrepreneur Magazine’s Encyclopedia of Entrepreneurs as one of the 520 greatest entrepreneurs in American history, along with historical figures such as Thomas Alva Edison, Henry Ford and Walt Disney and contemporaries Bill Gates, Ted Turner and Donald Trump. He is one of only 40 thus honored born after the start of World War II. Dr. Myers is also a member of the Pennsylvania Association of Broadcaster’s Hall of Fame. Dr. Myers was called upon several times by the U.S. Congress to testify as an expert on weather forecasts and information and on the respective roles of the government and private sector weather services. He was also an invited speaker by the U.S. National Weather Service to present his view of the future of weather in their Visions of Future Weather Service seminar series, and by the American Meteorological Society in their 2001 Summer Colloquium. Dr. Myers continues his lifelong interest in education as a trustee of The Pennsylvania State University, a post which he has held for the past 21, having been elected by alumni for eight 3-year terms. He is also a member of Pennsylvania Governor Schweiker’s Team Pennsylvania. He works from AccuWeather’s Global Headquarters in State College, PA. History Over the last 39 years, AccuWeather has grown from one man's dream to become the world's largest commercial weather service. Today, AccuWeather serves more than 15,000 clients worldwide with weather forecasts, data, color graphics, consulting services, computer hardware and software. AccuWeather serves clients in the media, government, industry and education. More than 180 million Americans recognize the AccuWeather name as the leader in weather forecasts and information. On November 15, 1962 Joel N. Myers, then a Penn State graduate student, began forecasting the weather for a gas utility company in Pennsylvania. Joel not only had a firm grasp of weather patterns, but he also had insight into the impact of the weather on businesses and people. As Joel worked on his M.S. and then Ph.D. in Meteorology from The Pennsylvania State University, AccuWeather's client base grew to include other businesses and government agencies. In 1971, AccuWeather began services to radio and television stations. Five of the first seven broadcast stations served by AccuWeather in the early '70s are still clients today. AccuWeather now serves hundreds of television and radio stations all across the United States plus stations from Canada to Chile, from Africa to Australia, and from Moscow to Manilla. During the early days of AccuWeather, Dr. Myers not only forecast and ran the new company, but remained an active member of the Penn State faculty. At the time of his retirement from teaching at Penn State, it was estimated that Dr. Myers had taught basic forecasting skills to 17% of all of the country's practicing meteorologists. During Dr. Myers' teaching at Penn State and work at AccuWeather he conducted numerous studies to help develop forecasting techniques which increase forecast accuracy. The AccuWeather approach to forecasting has helped make AccuWeather the most accurate and most recognized name among commercial weather forecasting services. Joel and AccuWeather share a commitment to excellence in education. Joel has served as a member of the Penn State Board of Trustees since 1981, and each year AccuWeather awards several scholarships to Penn State meteorology students and State College High School seniors. In addition, AccuWeather is a sponsor of the National Collegiate Weather Forecasting Contest. AccuWeather's pioneering developments have extended well beyond the creation and dissemination of weather forecasts. AccuWeather has also led the way in utilizing and developing new technologies. In 1979, AccuWeather began to develop a state-of-the-art meteorological database. AccuWeather also developed an educational program, On-Line with AccuWeather, utilizing teachers' guides, educational modules and student worksheets, which has been recognized with four awards as one of the top educational products. In 1983, AccuWeather began to make color weather graphics available, and these are now utilized by MSNBC, CNBC, CNN and more than 200 individual television stations. AccuWeather has also supplied graphics computer systems to more than 100 television stations. As technology advanced, AccuWeather was in the forefront and in 1994 AccuWeather began providing free Internet weather at AccuWeather.com, which has become one of the Web's leading weather sites. AccuWeather is the world leader in Internet weather, providing weather data, forecasts, and graphics to over 6000 sites including five of the six top TV news sites, and three of the four top cable news sites. AccuWeather pioneered advances in newspaper weather, providing newspapers with complete, camera-ready, black and white or color custom weather pages. With our latest technology, transmitting complete weather pages directly to a newspaper's pre-press system, AccuWeather today provides weather pages to more than 750 newspapers in the United States and around the world and, in addition, prepares all of the weather maps for The Associated Press. Other AccuWeather innovations include an automated, state-of- the-art fax service called AccuWeather Fax (tm) , and a warning service, FirstWarn (tm) , that automatically generates a crawl over a television station's broadcast signal to notify the public the instant an official warning is issued. Over the past 39 years, AccuWeather has grown from the dream of one person to one of the nation's best-known and most respected companies. AccuWeather today employs over 400 people, including 100 meteorologists, the largest staff of operational forecasters at one location anyplace in the world. It is conservatively estimated that the AccuWeather forecasts have, over the years, saved more than 100 lives and more than $30 million in property. AccuWeather is proud of its continued growth over the past 39 years. Each year, AccuWeather has grown in number of employees and clients served and total revenue. AccuWeather is an assembly of the best meteorologists, computer, graphics, technical and support personnel available. The AccuWeather staff takes pride in the company's success, and in the positive impact AccuWeather has had in people's lives. Return to top Headquarters AccuWeather's operation is housed in its Global Headquarters, a 52,000 square foot facility built on 6.5 acres of land near State College, PA. AccuWeather spent several years designing its headquarters, incorporating many features that enable us to serve our clients even better than ever. Some of the highlights include redundant computer facilities, on-site UPS and power generation, 23 radio booths and a TV studio. The dramatic operations room is larger than two basketball courts, and with a 21-foot high ceiling, it enables AccuWeather meteorologists, graphic artists, editors and operational support staff to interact together as integrated teams. The headquarters' state-of-the-art design and equipment enables AccuWeather to provide the most reliable and accurate weather information well into the new millennium. AccuWeather Strategy To create and grow a portfolio of profitable lines of weather and selected other businesses using techniques proven throughout our decades of success: Recognize customer needs, and exceed their expectations. Study our own product set and the marketplace and deliver solutions that improve on the best. Maintain flexibility in product features and pricing to provide maximum value to customers. Develop customer solutions and relationships that deliver recurring revenue and profit. Enhance AccuWeather's brand strengths. Seek significant new opportunities in accessible markets. Leverage alliances and acquisitions to gain new customers, markets and technology. Work with the Commercial Weather Industry and government to achieve our mission. Employ our proprietary intellectual property to maximum advantage. Be innovative and diligent in maximizing our efficiency and cost-effectiveness. Follow established processes and strategies while working in an orderly way to improve them. Finally, telling it like it is: http://www.cagw.org/site/PageServer?...themonth_Dec04 ... As for Punxsutawney Phil, the last thing Washington needs is another rodent. He seemed to be happy burrowing holes in the ground; but now he is burrowing holes in taxpayers’ wallets. On the real Groundhog Day, instead of waking up and seeing his shadow, he will see 10 more years of deficits. Unfortunately, taxpayers will not be able to hibernate through the coming crisis in entitlement spending, sure to be made worse by Congress’s addiction to pork spending. Democracy has reached a new low with the spectacle of rodents defending congressional earmarks, but the participation of AccuWeather CEO Barry Myers in this afternoon’s press conference presents another oddity, and some hypocrisy. Myers claims that the National Weather Service duplicates work done by the private sector a position taxpayers would appreciate. But AccuWeather is the nation’s largest private forecasting operation, part of a $1 billion industry. If Myers thinks the Punxsutawney Weather Center is so great, he could cough up more of his own money for the project, instead of reaching for tax dollars confiscated from other peoples’ paychecks. Despite Peterson’s, Myers’, and Phil’s best efforts to make the Punxsutawney Weather Center out to be the Greatest Thing Ever, its mission is no different than hundreds of museums throughout the country that manage to succeed without federal funding. Pork-barrel projects rarely, if ever, uplift economically struggling communities. There are hundreds of poor communities throughout the U.S. that should not be taxed to turn Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania into the “Weather Capital of the World,” simply because its congressman was able to curry favor with the right committee. While December 7 will always be “a day that will live in infamy,” this year it also represents the depths to which members of Congress will sink to protect their pork. For defending questionable priorities in a time of war, record deficits, and debt; circumventing the budget process; and grabbing $100,000 in federal funding for a pet project, CAGW names Rep. John Peterson and Punxsutawney Phil the December Co-Porkers of the Month. Citizens Against Government Waste is the nation's largest nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to eliminating waste, fraud, abuse, and mismanagement in government. |
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George Patterson wrote:
hit the other night when looking for the text of the bill contains a list of each contribution Accuweather made to him. Mostly small amounts, but they total over $3,000. Have you still the URL? - Andrew |
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Andrew Gideon wrote:
George Patterson wrote: hit the other night when looking for the text of the bill contains a list of each contribution Accuweather made to him. Mostly small amounts, but they total over $3,000. Have you still the URL? Never mind...someone else posted some good ones. - Andrew |
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On Wed, 18 May 2005 00:55:13 GMT, Larry Dighera
wrote in :: On Thu, 28 Apr 2005 16:29:14 GMT, Larry Dighera wrote in :: Here's a quote: http://www.livejournal.com/users/rjwhite/ "It is not an easy prospect for a business to attract advertisers, subscribers or investors when the government is providing similar products and services for free," Santorum said. Here's the response to my e-mail inquiry I received from one of my senators: From: Subject: Responding to your message Date: Tue, 17 May 2005 20:10:47 -0400 Message-ID: May 17, 2005 Dear Mr. Dighera: Thank you for contacting me regarding S.786, the National Weather Service Duties Act of 2005. I appreciate the opportunity to respond to your views, and I share your concerns about this bill. S.786 seeks to severely restrict the functions of the National Weather Service (NWS), which is run by the federal National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The NWS currently offers a wide range of free weather services for all Americans, including invaluable information for airplane pilots, farmers, and those seeking details about severe weather in their areas. This bill would prevent the NWS from offering these free weather services to the public. Instead, private weather companies, which rely primarily on the same data used by the NWS, would charge Americans for their services. The NWS provides a reliable and effective public service that is utilized by over six million Americans each day. S.786 eliminates this valuable service and unfairly penalizes people by requiring them to pay for information that should be available free of charge. This bill is currently in the Senate Commerce Committee, of which I am a member. Rest assured that I am not in favor of this bill and that I will work with my colleagues to prevent this bill from reaching the full Senate floor. Again, thank you for writing to me. Please do not hesitate to contact me again about this or any other issue of concern to you. Sincerely, Barbara Boxer United States Senator ================================================ Please do not reply to this e-mail. This is not an active e-mail address. If you wish to comment further on this issue or an any other issue and want to ensure an answer--please complete the form at http://boxer.senate.gov/contact/webform.cfm Today, I received a nice letter from my other senator thanking me for contacting her to share my opposition to the National Weather Service Duties Act. She says the legislation has been referred to the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, and should it come to the Senate floor, she will keep my comments in mind. |
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