East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, January 19, 2016, Page 2A, Image 2

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    NORTHWEST
East Oregonian
Page 2A
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Study: Man-made heat put in
oceans has doubled since 1997
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Staff shortages
Cuts to management and staff
SALEM — Mismanagement, during the recession contributed to
RXWGDWHG WHFKQRORJ\ DQG VWDI¿QJ long delays in issuing licenses and
shortages at the state’s teacher responding to complaints. In 2012,
licensing agency have resulted in the agency cut six positions.
Licensing staff lacked a direct
four-month-long waits for teacher
licenses, years-long investigations manager for nearly two years, while
into teacher misconduct and poor investigators faced high turnover
morale, according to an audit by the and high caseloads, according to the
audit.
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Technology
“The licensing and customer
The agency’s outdated and
service delays can damage the agen-
paper-based
cy’s reputation, complicate school “complicated”
district hiring and make it harder on licensing system also contributed to
educators looking for jobs,” stated delays. The commission’s website
lacked basic information that could
an audit report released Thursday.
The Legislature ordered the have provided answers to teacher’s
emergency audit in 2015 to address licensing questions, the report stated.
The commission, in a response
perennial problems at the Teachers
Standards and Practices Commis- sent to the Secretary of State’s
2I¿FH ODUJHO\ DJUHHG ZLWK WKH
sion.
Auditors, who released their Secretary of State’s critique of the
report Thursday, gave the commis- agency.
The commission indicated it
sion credit for making “recent
improvements in service to educa- plans to prioritize resolving backlogs
in licensing and investigations and
tors.”
“But it still faces substantial make changes to increase oversight
backlogs in issuing licenses, investi- of employees, enhance transparency
gating complaints against educators, and boost effectiveness.
An increase in license fees in
and responding promptly to educator
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questions,” the report stated.
could help in addressing backlogs
Mismanagement
Commission Executive Director by allowing the agency to add four
Vickie Chamberlain, who, auditors new staff positions and replace
said, received inadequate oversight the archaic licensing system. The
from the 17-member commission, agency’s budget operates solely on
announced her retirement in early licensing fees. Starting Jan. 1., appli-
October in the midst of the audit. cants were scheduled to be able to
She agreed to stay on at the agency ¿OHDSSOLFDWLRQVDQGSD\IHHVRQOLQH
Consumers are already seeing
until a successor could be found.
She told The Oregonian at the some improvements, the report indi-
time that the demands of the job had cated. The average call hold time
IHOOIURPPLQXWHVLQWR¿YH
been taking a toll on her.
Chamberlain said the job will minutes in the summer. Investiga-
EHSRVWHGVRRQEXWJDYHQRVSHFL¿F tors are testing a new triage system
timeline. The Department of Admin- to help reduce investigation lengths.
The agency, consisting of 26
istrative Services plans to handle the
recruitment, which will be national employees, licenses 19,000 K-12
teachers a year and investigates
in scope, she said.
“They would like a short transi- hundreds of complaints against
tion with me and the new director,” educators. The commission also
is responsible for disciplining
she said.
Auditors have recommended educators and evaluating education
that the agency set clearer goals to programs for teachers at Oregon
track performance of employees, colleges.
———
including the executive director;
The Capital Bureau is a collab-
make performance evaluations
routine, and review and update poli- oration between EO Media Group
cies, procedures and work processes and Pamplin Media Group.
By PARIS ACHEN
Capital Bureau
By SETH BORENSTEIN
AP Science Writer
WASHINGTON — The
amount of man-made heat energy
absorbed by the seas has doubled
since 1997, a study released
Monday showed.
Scientists have long known that
more than 90 percent of the heat
energy from man-made global
warming goes into the world’s
oceans instead of the ground. And
they’ve seen ocean heat content
rise in recent years. But the new
study, using ocean-observing
data that goes back to the British
research ship Challenger in the
1870s and including high-tech
modern underwater monitors and
computer models, tracked how
much man-made heat has been
buried in the oceans in the past
150 years.
The world’s oceans absorbed
approximately 150 zettajoules of
energy from 1865 to 1997, and
then absorbed about another 150
in the next 18 years, according to
a study published Monday in the
journal Nature Climate Change.
To put that in perspective, if
you exploded one atomic bomb
the size of the one that dropped
on Hiroshima every second for
a year, the total energy released
would be 2 zettajoules. So
since 1997, Earth’s oceans have
absorbed man-made heat energy
equivalent to a Hiroshima-style
bomb being exploded every
second for 75 straight years.
“The changes we’re talking
about, they are really, really big
numbers,” said study co-author
Paul Durack, an oceanographer
at the Lawrence Livermore
National Lab in California. “They
are nonhuman numbers.”
Because there are decades
when good data wasn’t available
and computer simulations are
LQYROYHG WKH RYHUDOO ¿JXUHV DUH
rough but still are reliable, the
study’s authors said. Most of
the added heat has been trapped
in the upper 2,300 feet, but with
every year the deeper oceans also
are absorbing more energy, they
said.
But the study’s authors and
outside experts say it’s not the
raw numbers that bother them.
It’s how fast those numbers are
increasing.
“After 2000 in particular the
rate of change is really starting to
ramp up,” Durack said.
This means the amount of
Timo Bremer/Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory via AP
This image provided by Lawrence Livermore National Labora-
tory shows Paciic and Atlantic meridional sections showing
upper-ocean warming for the past six decades (1955-2011). Red
colors indicate a warming (positive) anomaly and blue colors
indicate a cooling (negative) anomaly.
“These inding have potentially serious
consequences for life in the oceans as well
as for patterns of ocean circulation, storm
tracks and storm intensity.”
— Jane Lubchenco,
Oregon State University marine sciences professor
tially serious consequences for
life in the oceans as well as for
patterns of ocean circulation,
storm tracks and storm intensity,”
said Oregon State University
marine sciences professor Jane
Lubchenco, the former chief of
the National Oceanic and Atmo-
spheric Administration.
One outside scientist, Kevin
Trenberth, climate analysis chief
at the National Center for Atmo-
spheric Research, also has been
looking at ocean heat content and
he said his ongoing work shows
WKH *OHFNOHU WHDP ³VLJQL¿FDQWO\
underestimates” how much heat
the ocean has absorbed.
Jeff Severinghaus at the
Scripps Institute of Oceanog-
raphy praised the study, saying it
“provides real, hard evidence that
humans are dramatically heating
the planet.”
energy being trapped in Earth’s
climate system as a whole is
accelerating, the study’s lead
author Peter Gleckler, a climate
scientist at Lawrence Livermore,
said.
Because the oceans are so vast
and cold, the absorbed heat raises
temperatures by only a few tenths
of a degree, but the importance is
the energy balance, Gleckler and
his colleagues said. When oceans
absorb all that heat it keeps the
surface from getting even warmer
from the heat-trapping gases
spewed by the burning of coal, oil
and gas, the scientists said.
The warmer the oceans get,
the less heat they can absorb and
the more heat stays in the air
and on land surface, the study’s
co-author, Chris Forest at Penn-
sylvania State University, said.
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48° 44°
53° 41°
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HERMISTON TEMPERATURE FORECAST
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PENDLETON
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TEMPERATURE
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Yesterday
Normals
Records
LOW
53°
33°
42°
28°
63° (2005) -20° (1922)
PRECIPITATION
24 hours ending 3 p.m.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Last year to date
Normal year to date
0.30"
0.95"
0.93"
0.95"
0.70"
0.93"
HERMISTON
through 3 p.m. yesterday
TEMPERATURE
HIGH
Yesterday
Normals
Records
LOW
49°
32°
42°
29°
65° (1961) -11° (1930)
PRECIPITATION
24 hours ending 3 p.m.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Last year to date
Normal year to date
0.07"
0.50"
0.75"
0.50"
0.43"
0.75"
SUN AND MOON
Sunrise today
Sunset tonight
Moonrise today
Moonset today
Full
Last
Jan 23
Jan 31
48° 41°
54° 40°
51° 37°
Seattle
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Copyright © 2016, EO Media Group
TODAY
Tuesday, January 19, 2016
Spokane
Wenatchee
39/33
35/31
Tacoma
Moses
46/39
Lake
Pullman
Aberdeen Olympia
Yakima 39/31
42/35
46/42
46/39
39/28
Longview
Kennewick Walla Walla
47/44
47/39 Lewiston
42/38
Astoria
49/40
49/44
Portland
Enterprise
Hermiston
47/41
Pendleton 39/30
The Dalles 44/39
45/39
41/38
La Grande
Salem
42/36
49/43
Albany
Corvallis 49/42
49/42
John Day
44/34
Ontario
Eugene
Bend
41/31
49/42
41/29
Caldwell
Burns
41/31
37/24
Astoria
Baker City
Bend
Brookings
Burns
Enterprise
Eugene
Heppner
Hermiston
John Day
Klamath Falls
La Grande
Meacham
Medford
Newport
North Bend
Ontario
Pasco
Pendleton
Portland
Redmond
Salem
Spokane
Ukiah
Vancouver
Walla Walla
Yakima
Hi
49
39
41
53
37
39
49
44
44
44
41
42
40
51
50
54
41
42
45
47
44
49
39
41
46
47
39
Lo
44
29
29
43
24
30
42
35
39
34
27
36
34
37
43
44
31
37
39
41
31
43
33
32
42
39
28
W
r
sn
r
r
sn
sn
r
r
r
sh
sn
sn
sn
r
r
r
sn
r
r
r
r
r
sn
sn
r
r
r
NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY
Wed.
Hi
52
36
41
54
34
36
49
45
53
41
40
41
40
51
52
55
41
51
49
51
45
52
39
39
49
48
44
Lo
46
25
34
50
22
23
46
32
36
33
31
31
30
42
47
50
27
36
36
45
35
46
32
26
44
36
32
W
sh
sn
c
r
c
sn
sh
c
c
c
c
sn
sn
r
sh
r
sn
c
c
sh
c
sh
sn
c
sh
c
c
WORLD CITIES
Today
Beijing
Hong Kong
Jerusalem
London
Mexico City
Moscow
Paris
Rome
Seoul
Sydney
Tokyo
Hi
29
65
48
38
69
16
35
47
18
87
46
Lo
7
60
41
27
44
11
25
29
8
69
36
W
s
pc
sh
s
pc
sn
c
r
pc
s
s
Wed.
Hi
28
66
49
39
68
15
39
48
25
91
49
Lo
11
63
38
31
39
9
25
38
11
72
37
W
c
r
c
s
s
sn
s
c
pc
pc
s
WINDS
Medford
51/37
Klamath Falls
41/27
(in mph)
Today
Wednesday
Boardman
Pendleton
NE 4-8
SE 6-12
WSW 6-12
WSW 8-16
UV INDEX TODAY
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
REGIONAL FORECAST
Coastal Oregon: Cloudy today with rain;
steadiest and heaviest during the morning.
Showers early tonight.
Eastern and Central Oregon: Mostly cloudy
today with some snow and rain; snow level
mostly near 4,000 feet.
Western Washington: Periods of rain today;
arriving in the afternoon in central and
northern parts.
Eastern Washington: Snow across the north
today and tonight; any snow mixing with
rain across the south.
Cascades: Periods of snow and rain today
with snow level: 4,000 feet north, 5,000
feet south.
Northern California: Rain, heavy at times
today, but 3-6 inches of snow in the interior
mountains.
0
0
1
0
0
0
8 a.m. 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m.
0-2, Low
3-5, Moderate 6-7, High;
8-10, Very High;
11+, Extreme
The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ num-
ber, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
-10s
-0s
showers t-storms
0s
10s
rain
20s
flurries
30s
40s
snow
ice
50s
60s
cold front
70s
80s
90s
100s
warm front stationary front
110s
high
low
National Summary: Locally heavy snow will fall around the Great Lakes today as accumu-
lating snow spreads over much of the Plains with rain to the south. Rain and mountain
snow will return to the Northwest.
Yesterday’s National Extremes: (for the 48 contiguous states)
High 74° in Harlingen, Texas
Low -34° in Embarrass, Minn.
NATIONAL CITIES
Today
Albuquerque
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Birmingham
Boise
Boston
Charleston, SC
Charleston, WV
Chicago
Cleveland
Dallas
Denver
Detroit
El Paso
Fairbanks
Fargo
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Jacksonville
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Hi
49
39
30
28
38
41
45
26
43
20
16
19
65
37
23
66
1
11
82
68
17
48
24
61
44
65
Lo
31
25
23
17
26
30
33
19
25
8
11
11
35
23
12
38
-9
7
65
53
11
28
16
45
37
55
W
pc
s
s
s
c
s
sh
s
s
pc
pc
sf
c
sn
pc
s
pc
c
s
pc
pc
s
sn
pc
c
sh
Wed.
Hi
52
45
37
36
39
47
43
32
49
31
23
22
56
44
23
67
-4
23
80
70
25
58
31
65
51
67
Lo
30
38
26
22
23
45
28
21
37
21
15
14
45
22
13
41
-13
7
66
59
16
37
25
42
34
52
W
s
r
pc
pc
sn
r
sn
s
pc
sn
sn
sn
pc
c
sn
s
pc
c
r
sh
sn
pc
c
pc
r
pc
Today
Louisville
Memphis
Miami
Milwaukee
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Omaha
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Portland, ME
Providence
Raleigh
Rapid City
Reno
Sacramento
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Diego
San Francisco
Seattle
Tucson
Washington, DC
Wichita
Hi
24
38
65
14
9
30
59
29
53
21
29
70
21
27
31
33
49
57
26
42
65
59
48
71
28
34
Lo
18
33
52
9
6
24
51
24
25
7
22
48
16
18
17
13
34
47
21
35
57
49
43
43
18
19
W
pc
c
pc
s
c
pc
s
s
c
sn
s
pc
s
s
s
c
c
r
sn
sn
c
r
r
pc
s
i
Wed.
Hi
35
46
71
22
21
39
69
37
47
29
38
70
27
34
39
36
50
61
32
38
67
60
52
70
35
37
Lo
22
36
59
10
15
33
57
26
30
21
26
48
12
20
28
18
32
46
24
22
53
51
44
42
25
27
Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain,
sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
W
sn
r
pc
c
c
sn
c
pc
c
c
pc
s
s
pc
pc
c
pc
c
c
sn
pc
c
sh
s
pc
c