NEER webinar

The NEER Steering Committee conducted an informational webinar organized by the CONVERGE Facility on Aug 10, 2020. The Steering Committee described NEER’s mission, the benefits of membership, and NEER’s event-response and data-distribution plans, as well as each member’s motivation and reasons for volunteering for and participating in NEER.

The webinar recording and slides are available via the CONVERGE website at: https://converge.colorado.edu/communications/webinar-series/collaborating-to-learn-from-hurricanes-the-nearshore-extreme-events-reconnaissance-association

DUNEX

NEER members may coordinate with academic and agency researchers and local managers participating in the During Nearshore Extreme Event Experiment (uscoastalresearch.org/dunex) being conducted in 2019 and 2020.

DUNEX is a multi-agency, academic, and non-governmental organization collaborative community experiment to study nearshore coastal processes during coastal storms. The multi-phase experiment begins with a pilot study in fall 2019, followed by the full experiment starting in fall 2020 and extending into winter 2021. The northern Outer Banks, North Carolina, extending from the Cape Hatteras National Seashore north to the Virginia border, was selected as the region of focus, due to the prevalence of coastal storms that impact the area annually, such as the passage of Hurricane Dorian early this month. The study provides an opportunity for research groups to observe and analyze interactions between ocean, land, atmospheric, and biological processes during nearshore events.

Agencies, organizations, and universities participating in the pilot study include the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, U.S. Geological Survey, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, North Carolina State University, East Carolina University, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Virginia Commonwealth University, Oregon State University, the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, the U.S. Naval Academy, the University of Southern Mississippi, George Mason University, Northeastern University, North Carolina Coastal Federation, the University of Washington, the University of Delaware, Queen’s University, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the National Park Service, the National Science Foundation and the University of Florida.

Rapid Equipment Facility training week in Duck, NC

The National Science Foundation’s Natural Hazards Reconnaissance Facility, known as RAPID, (http://rapid.designsafe-ci.org/) provides investigators with the equipment, software, and support services needed to collect, process, and analyze perishable data from natural hazard events.

On October 7 – 11, RAPID is hosting a hands-on training and deployment opportunity at the U.S. Army’s Field Research Facility (FRF) in Duck, NC and at the more southerly experiment area on Pea Island NC. RAPID’s equipment portfolio and RAPID staff will be available free of charge for deployment and data collection by research teams during this period, providing participants with the opportunity to develop expertise in using RAPID equipment to collect, process, and integrate the collected data using the RAPID mobile software application.

NEER Development Conference 2019

Thirty-nine academics and agency personnel participated in the NEER Development Conference on August 5-6, 2019 at the Virginia Tech Executive Briefing Center in Arlington, Virginia to collaborate on developing a framework for the NEER Association.

The goal of the workshop was to develop a strategic plan, organizational structure, and deployment protocols for the NEER Association. The policies and guidelines were built off the framework of existing rapid response networks (GEER, StEER, SSEEER, and iSEER), but the conference attendees considered modifications for pre-event deployment of interdisciplinary teams.

Participants: Alexandria Boehm (Stanford U.), Jenna Brown (USGS), Qin Chen (Northeastern U.), Tim Cockerill (U. Texas TACC, DesignSafe-CI), Greg Dusek (NOAA), Steve Elgar (WHOI), Diane Foster (UNH), David Frost (GA Tech, GEER), Sally Hacker (OSU), James Heiss (U Mass Lowell), Navid Jafari (LSU), Victoria Johnson (USNA), Tracy Kjiewski-Correa (Notre Dame, StEER), Joseph Long (UNC Wilmington), Mark Merrifield (SIO), Kent Messer (U Del), Holly Michael (U Del), Laura Moore (UNC Chapel Hill), Melissa Moulton (UW-APL), Amy Mueller (Northeastern U.), Mara Orescanin (NPS), Lori Peek (U Colorado, CONVERGE, iSEEER, SSEER), Stephanie Smallegan (South Alabama U.), Nina Stark (VA Tech), Hilary Stockdon (USGS), Aron Stubbins (Northeastern U.), Sergey Vinogradov (NOAA), Ping Wang (USF), Anna Wargula (USNA), Joseph Wartman (UW, RAPID-EF), Meagan Wengrove (OSU), Neil Weston (NOAA), Lindsey Williams (MIT), Alicia Wilson (U. South Carolina), Gabrielle Wong-Parodi (Stanford U.), Julie Zinnert (VCU)

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