[117th Congress Public Law 316]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[[Page 4405]]
FLOOD LEVEL OBSERVATION, OPERATIONS,
AND DECISION SUPPORT ACT
[[Page 136 STAT. 4406]]
Public Law 117-316
117th Congress
An Act
To establish a national integrated flood information system within the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and for other
purposes. <<NOTE: Dec. 27, 2022 - [S. 558]>>
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress assembled, <<NOTE: Flood Level
Observation, Operations, and Decision Support Act.>>
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE; TABLE OF CONTENTS.
(a) <<NOTE: 15 USC 9701 note.>> Short Title.--This Act may be cited
as the ``Flood Level Observation, Operations, and Decision Support Act''
or the ``FLOODS Act''.
(b) Table of Contents.--The table of contents for this Act is as
follows:
Sec. 1. Short title; table of contents.
Sec. 2. Definitions.
Sec. 3. National Integrated Flood Information System.
Sec. 4. Observations and modeling for total water prediction.
Sec. 5. Service coordination hydrologists at River Forecast Centers of
the National Weather Service.
Sec. 6. Improving National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
communication of future flood risks and hazardous flash flood
events.
Sec. 7. Freshwater monitoring along the coast.
Sec. 8. Tornado warning improvement.
Sec. 9. Hurricane forecast improvement program.
Sec. 10. Weather and water research and development planning.
Sec. 11. Forecast communication coordinators.
Sec. 12. Estimates of precipitation frequency in the United States.
Sec. 13. Interagency Committee on Water Management and Infrastructure.
Sec. 14. National Weather Service hydrologic research fellowship
program.
Sec. 15. Identification and support of consistent, Federal set of
forward-looking, long-term meteorological information.
Sec. 16. Gap analysis on availability of snow-related data to assess and
predict flood and flood impacts.
Sec. 17. Availability to the public of flood-related data.
SEC. <<NOTE: 15 USC 9701.>> 2. DEFINITIONS.
In this Act:
(1) Administrator.--The term ``Administrator'' means the
Administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration.
(2) State.--The term ``State'' means each State of the
United States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico, American Samoa, Guam, the Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands, the Virgin Islands of the United
States, and any other territory or possession of the United
States.
SEC. 3. <<NOTE: 15 USC 9702.>> NATIONAL INTEGRATED FLOOD
INFORMATION SYSTEM.
(a) <<NOTE: Establishment.>> In General.--The Administrator shall
establish a system, to be known as the ``National Integrated Flood
Information System'',
[[Page 136 STAT. 4407]]
to better inform and provide for more timely decision making to reduce
flood-related effects and costs.
(b) System Functions.--The Administrator, through the National
Integrated Flood Information System, shall--
(1) provide an effective flood early warning system that--
(A) collects and integrates information on the key
indicators of floods and flood impacts, including
streamflow, reservoir release and diversion,
precipitation, soil moisture, snow water equivalent,
land cover, and evaporative demand;
(B) makes usable, reliable, and timely forecasts of
floods;
(C) <<NOTE: Assessment.>> assesses the severity of
flood conditions and effects;
(D) provides information described in subparagraph
(A), forecasts described in subparagraph (B), and
assessments described in subparagraph (C) at the
national, regional, and local levels, as appropriate;
and
(E) communicates flood forecasts, flood conditions,
and flood impacts to appropriate entities engaged in
flood planning, preparedness, and response and post-
event flood extent, including--
(i) decision makers at the Federal, State,
local, and Tribal levels of government; and
(ii) the public;
(2) <<NOTE: Data.>> provide timely data, information, and
products that reflect differences in flood conditions among
localities, regions, watersheds, and States;
(3) <<NOTE: Coordination.>> coordinate and integrate,
through interagency agreements as practicable, Federal research
and monitoring in support of the flood early warning information
system provided under paragraph (1);
(4) use existing forecasting and assessment programs and
partnerships;
(5) make improvements in seasonal precipitation and
temperature, subseasonal precipitation and temperature, and
flood water prediction; and
(6) continue ongoing research and monitoring activities
relating to floods, including research activities relating to--
(A) the prediction, length, severity, and impacts of
floods and improvement of the accuracy, timing, and
specificity of flash flood warnings;
(B) the role of extreme weather events and climate
variability in floods; and
(C) how water travels over and through surfaces.
(c) Partnerships.--The Administrator, through the National
Integrated Flood Information System, may--
(1) <<NOTE: Determination.>> engage with the private sector
to improve flood monitoring, forecasts, land and topography
data, and communication, if the Administrator determines that
such engagement is appropriate, cost effective, and beneficial
to the public and decision makers described in subsection
(b)(1)(E)(i);
(2) facilitate the development of 1 or more academic
cooperative partnerships to assist in carrying out the functions
of the National Integrated Flood Information System described in
subsection (b);
[[Page 136 STAT. 4408]]
(3) use and support monitoring by citizen scientists,
including by developing best practices to facilitate maximum
data integration, as the Administrator considers appropriate;
(4) engage with, and leverage the resources of, entities
within the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in
existence as of the date of the enactment of this Act, such as
the National Weather Service with respect to forecast and
warning functions, the National Integrated Drought Information
System, the Regional Climate Center, and the National Mesonet
Program, to improve coordination of water monitoring,
forecasting, and management; and
(5) engage with and support water monitoring by the United
States Geological Survey--
(A) to improve the availability and continuity of
streamflow data at critical locations through the
deployment of rapid deployment gages and the flood-
hardening of at-risk streamflow gauges; and
(B) to increase storm surge monitoring data through
the deployment of additional storm surge sensors.
(d) Consultation.--In developing and maintaining the National
Integrated Flood Information System, the Administrator shall consult
with relevant Federal, State, local, and Tribal government agencies,
research institutions, and the private sector.
(e) Cooperation From Other Federal Agencies.--Each Federal agency
shall cooperate as appropriate with the Administrator in carrying out
this section.
SEC. 4. <<NOTE: 15 USC 9703.>> OBSERVATIONS AND MODELING FOR
TOTAL WATER PREDICTION.
(a) <<NOTE: Evaluations.>> Partnerships.--
(1) In general.--The Administrator shall establish
partnerships with 1 or more institutions of higher education (as
defined in section 101 of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20
U.S.C. 1001)) to evaluate observations that would improve total
water prediction.
(2) Priority observations.--In establishing partnerships
under paragraph (1), the Administrator shall prioritize
partnerships to evaluate observations from uncrewed aerial
systems.
(b) Maintained Observations.--If the Administrator determines that
incorporating additional observations improves total water prediction,
the Administrator shall, to the extent practicable, continue
incorporating those observations.
(c) Modeling Improvements.--The Administrator shall advance
geographic coverage, resolution, skill, and efficiency of coastal
oceanographic modeling, including efforts that improve the coupling of
and interoperability between hydrological models and coastal ocean
models.
SEC. 5. <<NOTE: 15 USC 9704.>> SERVICE COORDINATION HYDROLOGISTS
AT RIVER FORECAST CENTERS OF THE NATIONAL
WEATHER SERVICE.
(a) Designation of Service Coordination Hydrologists.--
(1) In general.--The Director of the National Weather
Service (in this section referred to as the ``Director'') shall
designate at least 1 service coordination hydrologist at each
River Forecast Center of the National Weather Service.
(2) Performance by other employees.--Performance of the
responsibilities outlined in this section is not limited to the
service coordination hydrologist position.
[[Page 136 STAT. 4409]]
(b) Primary Role of Service Coordination Hydrologists.--The primary
role of the service coordination hydrologist shall be to carry out the
responsibilities required by this section.
(c) Responsibilities.--
(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), consistent with
the analysis described in section 409 of the Weather Research
and Forecasting Innovation Act of 2017 (Public Law 115-25; 131
Stat. 112), and in order to increase impact-based decision
support services, each service coordination hydrologist
designated under subsection (a) shall, with respect to
hydrology--
(A) be responsible for providing service to the
geographic area of responsibility covered by the River
Forecast Center at which the service coordination
hydrologist is employed to help ensure that users of
products and services of the National Weather Service
can respond effectively to improve outcomes from flood
events;
(B) liaise with users of products and services of
the National Weather Service, such as the public,
academia, media outlets, users in the hydropower,
transportation, recreation, and agricultural
communities, and forestry, land, fisheries, and water
management interests, to evaluate the adequacy and
usefulness of the products and services of the National
Weather Service;
(C) collaborate with such River Forecast Centers and
Weather Forecast Offices and Federal, State, local, and
Tribal government agencies as the Director considers
appropriate in developing, proposing, and implementing
plans to develop, modify, or tailor products and
services of the National Weather Service to improve the
usefulness of such products and services;
(D) engage in interagency partnerships with Federal,
State, local, and Tribal government agencies to explore
the use of forecast-informed reservoir operations to
reduce flood risk;
(E) ensure the maintenance and accuracy of flooding
call lists, appropriate office flooding policy or
procedures, and other flooding information or
dissemination methodologies or strategies; and
(F) work closely with Federal, State, local, and
Tribal emergency and floodplain management agencies, and
other agencies relating to disaster management, to
ensure a planned, coordinated, and effective
preparedness and response effort.
(2) Other staff.--The Director may assign a responsibility
set forth in paragraph (1) to such other staff as the Director
considers appropriate to carry out such responsibility.
(d) Additional Responsibilities.--
(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), a service
coordination hydrologist designated under subsection (a) may,
with respect to hydrology--
(A) work with a State agency to develop plans for
promoting more effective use of products and services of
the National Weather Service throughout the State;
(B) identify priority community preparedness
objectives;
(C) develop plans to meet the objectives identified
under subparagraph (B); and
[[Page 136 STAT. 4410]]
(D) conduct flooding event preparedness planning and
citizen education efforts with and through various
State, local, and Tribal government agencies and other
disaster management-related organizations.
(2) Other staff.--The Director may assign a responsibility
set forth in paragraph (1) to such other staff as the Director
considers appropriate to carry out such responsibility.
SEC. 6. <<NOTE: 15 USC 9705.>> IMPROVING NATIONAL OCEANIC AND
ATMOSPHERIC ADMINISTRATION COMMUNICATION OF
FUTURE FLOOD RISKS AND HAZARDOUS FLASH FLOOD
EVENTS.
(a) Assessment of Flash Flood Watches and Warnings.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 2 years after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Administrator shall--
(A) conduct an assessment of--
(i) the flash flood watches and warnings of
the National Weather Service; and
(ii) the information delivery to support
preparation and responses to floods; and
(B) <<NOTE: Reports.>> submit to Congress a report
on the findings of the Administrator with respect to the
assessment required by subparagraph (A).
(2) Elements.--The assessment required by paragraph (1)(A)
shall include the following:
(A) <<NOTE: Evaluations.>> An evaluation of whether
the watches, warnings, and information described in
paragraph (1)(A) effectively--
(i) communicate risk to the general public;
(ii) inform action to prevent loss of life and
property;
(iii) inform action to support flood
preparation and response; and
(iv) deliver information in a manner designed
to lead to appropriate action.
(B) <<NOTE: Recommenda- tions.>> Subject to
subsection (b)(2), such recommendations as the
Administrator may have for--
(i) legislative and administrative action to
improve the watches and warnings described in
paragraph (1)(A)(i); and
(ii) such research as the Administrator
considers necessary to address the focus areas
described in paragraph (3).
(3) Focus areas.--The assessment required by paragraph
(1)(A) shall focus on the following areas:
(A) Ways to communicate the risks posed by hazardous
flash flood events to the public that are most likely to
result in informed decision making regarding the
mitigation of those risks.
(B) Ways to provide actionable geographic
information to the recipient of a watch or warning for a
flash flood, including partnering with emergency
response agencies, as appropriate.
(C) <<NOTE: Evaluation.>> Evaluation of information
delivery to support the preparation for and response to
floods.
(4) Consultation.--In conducting the assessment required by
paragraph (1)(A), the Administrator shall consult with--
(A) individuals in the academic sector, including
individuals in the field of social and behavioral
sciences;
[[Page 136 STAT. 4411]]
(B) other weather services;
(C) media outlets and other entities that distribute
the watches and warnings described in paragraph
(1)(A)(i);
(D) floodplain managers and emergency planners and
responders, including State, local, and Tribal emergency
management agencies;
(E) other government users of the watches and
warnings described in paragraph (1)(A)(i), including the
Federal Highway Administration; and
(F) such other Federal agencies as the Administrator
determines rely on watches and warnings regarding flash
floods for operational decisions.
(5) <<NOTE: Contracts. Review.>> National academy of
sciences.--The Administrator shall engage with the National
Academy of Sciences, as the Administrator considers necessary
and practicable, including by contracting with the National
Research Council to review the scientific and technical
soundness of the assessment required by paragraph (1)(A),
including the recommendations under paragraph (2)(B).
(6) Methodologies.--In conducting the assessment required by
paragraph (1)(A), the Administrator shall use such methodologies
as the Administrator considers are generally accepted by the
weather enterprise, including social and behavioral sciences.
(b) Improvements to Flash Flood Watches and Warnings.--
(1) In general.--Based on the assessment required by
subsection (a)(1)(A), the Administrator shall make such
improvements to the watches and warnings described in that
subsection as the Administrator considers necessary--
(A) to improve the communication of the risks posed
by hazardous flash flood events; and
(B) to provide actionable geographic information to
the recipient of a watch or warning for a flash flood.
(2) Requirements regarding recommendations.--In conducting
the assessment required by subsection (a)(1)(A), the
Administrator shall ensure that any recommendation under
subsection (a)(2)(B) that the Administrator considers a major
change--
(A) is validated by social and behavioral science
using a generalizable sample;
(B) accounts for the needs of various demographics,
vulnerable populations, and geographic regions;
(C) responds to the needs of Federal, State, local,
and Tribal government partners and media partners; and
(D) accounts for necessary changes to federally
operated watch and warning propagation and dissemination
infrastructure and protocols.
(c) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Watch; warning.--
(A) In general.--Except as provided in subparagraph
(B), the terms ``watch'' and ``warning'', with respect
to a hazardous flash flood event, mean products issued
by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
intended for use by the general public--
(i) to alert the general public to the
potential for or presence of the event; and
[[Page 136 STAT. 4412]]
(ii) to inform action to prevent loss of life
and property.
(B) Exclusion.--The terms ``watch'' and ``warning''
do not include technical or specialized meteorological
and hydrological forecasts, outlooks, or model guidance
products.
(2) Weather enterprise.--The term ``weather enterprise'' has
the meaning given that term in section 2 of the Weather Research
and Forecasting Innovation Act of 2017 (15 U.S.C. 8501).
SEC. <<NOTE: 15 USC 9706.>> 7. FRESHWATER MONITORING ALONG THE
COAST.
(a) Data Availability Assessment.--The Administrator shall assess
the availability of short- and long-term data on large-scale freshwater
flooding into oceans, bays, and estuaries, including data on--
(1) flow rate, including discharge;
(2) conductivity;
(3) oxygen concentration;
(4) nutrient load;
(5) water temperature; and
(6) sediment load.
(b) Data Needs Assessment.--The Administrator shall assess the need
for additional data to assess and predict the effect of the flooding and
freshwater discharge described in subsection (a).
(c) Inventory of Data Needs.--Based on the assessments required by
subsections (a) and (b), the Administrator shall create an inventory of
data needs with respect to the flooding and freshwater discharge
described in subsections (a) and (b).
(d) Planning.--In planning for the collection of additional data
necessary for ecosystem-based modeling of the effect of the flooding and
freshwater discharge described in subsections (a) and (b), the
Administrator shall use the inventory created under subsection (c).
SEC. 8. TORNADO WARNING IMPROVEMENT.
Section 103 of the Weather Research and Forecasting Innovation Act
of 2017 (15 U.S.C. 8513) is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (c) and (d) as subsections
(d) and (e), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after subsection (b) the following:
``(c) <<NOTE: Examination.>> Innovative Observations.--The Under
Secretary shall ensure that the program periodically examines the value
of incorporating innovative observations, such as acoustic or infrasonic
measurements, observations from phased array radars, and observations
from mesonets, with respect to the improvement of tornado forecasts,
predictions, and warnings.''.
SEC. 9. HURRICANE FORECAST IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.
Section 104(b) of the Weather Research and Forecasting Innovation
Act of 2017 (15 U.S.C. 8514(b)) is amended--
(1) in paragraph (2), by striking ``; and'' and inserting a
semicolon;
(2) in paragraph (3), by striking the period at the end and
inserting ``; and''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following:
[[Page 136 STAT. 4413]]
``(4) evaluating and incorporating, as appropriate,
innovative observations, including acoustic or infrasonic
measurements.''.
SEC. 10. WEATHER AND WATER RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT PLANNING.
Section 105(2) of the Weather Research and Forecasting Innovation
Act of 2017 (15 U.S.C. 8515(2)) is amended by inserting ``and flood-
event'' after ``operational weather''.
SEC. 11. FORECAST COMMUNICATION COORDINATORS.
Section 1762(f)(1) of the Food Security Act of 1985 (15 U.S.C.
8521(f)(1)) is amended, in the second sentence, by striking ``may'' and
inserting ``shall''.
SEC. 12. <<NOTE: 15 USC 9707.>> ESTIMATES OF PRECIPITATION
FREQUENCY IN THE UNITED STATES.
(a) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Freely associated states.--The term ``Freely Associated
States'' means the Republic of Palau, the Republic of the
Marshall Islands, and the Federated States of Micronesia, which
have each entered into a Compact of Free Association with the
United States.
(2) United states.--The term ``United States'' means the 50
States of the United States, the District of Columbia, the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin Islands,
Guam, American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands, and the Freely Associated States.
(b) In General.--The Administrator shall establish a program, to be
known as the ``NOAA Precipitation Frequency Atlas of the United
States'', to compile, estimate, analyze, and communicate the frequency
of precipitation in the United States.
(c) Functions.--The NOAA Precipitation Frequency Atlas of the United
States--
(1) shall better inform the public and provide information
on--
(A) temporal and spatial distribution of heavy
precipitation;
(B) analyses of seasonality in precipitation; and
(C) trends in annual maximum series data; and
(2) may serve as the official source of the Federal
Government on estimates of precipitation frequency and
associated information with respect to the United States.
(d) <<NOTE: Estimates.>> Requirements.--
(1) Coverage.--The NOAA Precipitation Frequency Atlas of the
United States shall include such estimates of the frequency of
precipitation in the United States as the Administrator
determines appropriate.
(2) Frequency.--Such estimates--
(A) <<NOTE: Time period.>> shall be conducted not
less frequently than once every 10 years; and
(B) may be conducted more frequently if determined
appropriate by the Administrator.
(3) Publication.--Such estimates and methodologies used to
conduct such estimates shall be--
(A) <<NOTE: Determination.>> subject to an
appropriate, scientific process, as determined by the
Administrator; and
[[Page 136 STAT. 4414]]
(B) <<NOTE: Public information. Web posting.>>
published on a publicly accessible website of the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
(e) Partnerships.--The Administrator may partner with other Federal
agencies, members of the private sector, academic cooperative
partnerships, or nongovernment associations to assist in carrying out
the functions described in subsection (c).
(f) Consultation.--In carrying out this section, the Administrator
may consult with relevant Federal, State, local, Tribal, and Territorial
government agencies, research institutions, and the private sector, as
the Administrator determines necessary.
(g) Coordination.--In carrying out this section, the Administrator
may coordinate with other Federal agencies.
(h) <<NOTE: Time period.>> Authorization of Appropriations.--There
are authorized to be appropriated to carry out this section, from
amounts otherwise authorized to be appropriated to the Administrator to
carry out this Act, $3,500,000 for each of fiscal years 2022 through
2030.
SEC. 13. <<NOTE: 15 USC 9708.>> INTERAGENCY COMMITTEE ON WATER
MANAGEMENT AND INFRASTRUCTURE.
(a) Establishment.--There is established a committee, to be known as
the ``Interagency Committee on Water Management and Infrastructure'' (in
this section referred to as the ``Water Policy Committee'').
(b) Membership.--The Water Policy Committee shall be composed of the
following members:
(1) The Administrator.
(2) The Secretary of the Interior.
(3) The Administrator of the Environmental Protection
Agency.
(4) The Secretary of Agriculture.
(5) The Secretary of Commerce.
(6) The Secretary of Energy.
(7) The Secretary of the Army.
(8) The heads of such other agencies as the co-chairs
consider appropriate.
(c) Co-Chairs.--The Water Policy Committee shall be co-chaired by
the Secretary of the Interior and the Administrator of the Environmental
Protection Agency.
(d) <<NOTE: Time period.>> Meetings.--The Water Policy Committee
shall meet not less frequently than 6 times each year, at the call of
the co-chairs.
(e) General Purpose and Duties.--The Water Policy Committee shall
ensure that agencies and departments across the Federal Government that
engage in water-related matters, including water storage and supplies,
water quality and restoration activities, water infrastructure,
transportation on United States rivers and inland waterways, and water
forecasting, work together where such agencies and departments have
joint or overlapping responsibilities to--
(1) improve interagency coordination among Federal agencies
and departments on water resource management and water
infrastructure issues;
(2) coordinate existing water-related Federal task forces,
working groups, and other formal cross-agency initiatives, as
appropriate;
[[Page 136 STAT. 4415]]
(3) prioritize managing the water resources of the United
States and promoting resilience of the water-related
infrastructure of the United States, including--
(A) increasing water storage, water supply
reliability, and drought resiliency;
(B) improving water quality, source water
protection, and nutrient management;
(C) promoting restoration activities;
(D) improving water systems, including with respect
to drinking water, desalination, water reuse,
wastewater, and flood control; and
(E) improving water data management, research,
modeling, and forecasting;
(4) improve interagency coordination of data management,
access, modeling, and visualization with respect to water-
related matters;
(5) promote integrated planning for Federal investments in
water-related infrastructure to enhance coordination and protect
taxpayer investment; and
(6) support workforce development and efforts to recruit,
train, and retain professionals to operate and maintain
essential drinking water, wastewater, flood control, hydropower,
water delivery, and water storage facilities in the United
States.
(f) <<NOTE: Deadline. List.>> Cross-Agency Priority Research
Needs.--Not later than 1 year after the date of the enactment of this
Act, the Water Policy Committee shall develop and submit to Congress a
list of research needs that includes needs for cross-agency research and
coordination.
SEC. 14. <<NOTE: 15 USC 9709.>> NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE
HYDROLOGIC RESEARCH FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM.
(a) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Assistant administrator.--The term ``Assistant
Administrator'' means the Assistant Administrator for Weather
Services of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
(2) Decision support services.--The term ``decision support
services'' means information, including data and refined
products, that supports water resources-related decision-making
processes.
(3) Institution of higher education.--The term ``institution
of higher education'' has the meaning given that term in section
101 of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1001).
(4) NOAA line offices.--The term ``NOAA line offices'' means
the following offices of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration:
(A) The National Ocean Service.
(B) The National Environmental Satellite, Data, and
Information Service.
(C) The National Marine Fisheries Service.
(D) The Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research.
(E) The Office of Marine and Aviation Operations.
(b) Hydrologic Research Fellowship Program.--
(1) Establishment.--The Administrator shall establish a
hydrologic research fellowship program (in this section referred
to as the ``program'') for qualified individuals.
[[Page 136 STAT. 4416]]
(2) Qualified individual.--For purposes of this section, a
qualified individual is an individual who is--
(A) a citizen of the United States; and
(B) enrolled in a research-based graduate program,
at an institution of higher education, in a field that
advances the research priorities developed by the
Assistant Administrator under paragraph (7), such as--
(i) hydrology;
(ii) earth sciences;
(iii) atmospheric sciences;
(iv) computer sciences;
(v) engineering;
(vi) environmental sciences;
(vii) geosciences;
(viii) urban planning; or
(ix) related social sciences.
(3) Award guidelines.--Fellowships under the program shall
be awarded pursuant to guidelines established by the Assistant
Administrator.
(4) Selection preference.--In selecting qualified
individuals for participation in the program, the Assistant
Administrator shall give preference to applicants from
historically Black colleges and universities and minority-
serving institutions.
(5) Placement.--The program shall support the placement of
qualified individuals in positions within the executive branch
of the Federal Government where such individuals can address and
advance the research priorities developed by the Assistant
Administrator under paragraph (7).
(6) <<NOTE: Time period.>> Fellowship term.--A fellowship
under the program shall be for a period of up to 2 years.
(7) <<NOTE: Publication.>> Fellowship research priorities.--
The Assistant Administrator, in consultation with
representatives from the NOAA line offices, the United States
Geological Survey, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, and
the Army Corps of Engineers, as appropriate, shall develop and
publish priorities for the conduct of research by fellows, which
may include the following:
(A) Advance the collaborative development of a
flexible community-based water resources modeling
system.
(B) Apply artificial intelligence and machine
learning capabilities to advance existing hydrologic
modeling capabilities.
(C) Support the evolution and integration of
hydrologic modeling within an Earth Systems Modeling
Framework.
(D) Improve visualizations of hydrologic model
outputs.
(E) Advance the state of coupled freshwater and salt
water modeling and forecasting capabilities.
(F) Advance understanding and process representation
of water quality parameters.
(G) Advance the assimilation of in-situ and remotely
sensed observations and data.
(H) Support the integration of social science to
advance decision support services.
(I) Develop methods to study groundwater
sustainability and estimate the efficiency of recharge
management.
(c) Direct Hiring.--
[[Page 136 STAT. 4417]]
(1) Authority.--During fiscal year 2022 and any fiscal year
thereafter, the head of any Federal agency may appoint, without
regard to the provisions of subchapter I of chapter 33 of title
5, United States Code, other than sections 3303 and 3328 of that
title, to a position with the Federal agency a recipient of a
fellowship under the program who--
(A) earned a degree from a program described in
subsection (b)(2)(B);
(B) successfully fulfilled the requirements of the
fellowship within the executive branch of the Federal
Government; and
(C) meets qualification standards established by the
Office of Personnel Management.
(2) <<NOTE: Deadline.>> Exercise of authority.--The direct
hire authority provided by this subsection shall be exercised
with respect to an individual described in paragraph (1) not
later than 2 years after the date on which the individual
completed the fellowship under the program.
SEC. 15. <<NOTE: 15 USC 9710.>> IDENTIFICATION AND SUPPORT OF
CONSISTENT, FEDERAL SET OF FORWARD-LOOKING,
LONG-TERM METEOROLOGICAL INFORMATION.
(a) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Extreme weather.--The term ``extreme weather'' includes
observed or anticipated severe and unseasonable atmospheric
conditions, including drought, heavy precipitation, hurricanes,
tornadoes and other windstorms (including derechos), large hail,
extreme heat, extreme cold, flooding, sustained temperatures or
precipitation that deviate substantially from historical
averages, and any other weather event that the Administrator
determines qualifies as extreme weather.
(2) Long-term.--The term ``long-term'' shall have such
meaning as the Director of the National Institute of Standards
and Technology, in consultation with the Administrator,
considers appropriate for purposes of this section.
(3) Other environmental trends.--The term ``other
environmental trends'' means wildfires, coastal flooding, inland
flooding, land subsidence, rising sea levels, and any other
challenges relating to changes in environmental systems over
time that the Administrator determines qualify as environmental
challenges other than extreme weather.
(b) Identification and Support of Consistent, Federal Set of
Forward-looking, Long-term Meteorological Information.--The
Administrator shall identify, and support research that enables, a
consistent, Federal set of forward-looking, long-term meteorological
information that models future extreme weather events, other
environmental trends, projections, and up-to-date observations,
including mesoscale information as determined appropriate by the
Administrator.
SEC. 16. <<NOTE: 15 USC 9711.>> GAP ANALYSIS ON AVAILABILITY OF
SNOW-RELATED DATA TO ASSESS AND PREDICT
FLOOD AND FLOOD IMPACTS.
(a) In General.--The Administrator, in consultation with the
Department of Agriculture, the Department of the Interior, and the Army
Corps of Engineers, shall conduct an analysis of gaps in the
availability of snow-related data to assess and predict floods and flood
impacts, including data on the following:
(1) Snow water equivalent.
[[Page 136 STAT. 4418]]
(2) Snow depth.
(3) Snowpack temperature.
(4) Snow and mixed-phase precipitation.
(5) Snow melt.
(6) Rain-snow line.
(b) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment
of this Act, the Administrator shall submit to the Committee on
Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate and the Committee on
Science, Space, and Technology of the House of Representatives a report
on--
(1) the findings of the gap analysis required by subsection
(a); and
(2) opportunities for additional collaboration among Federal
agencies to collect snow-related data to better assess and
predict floods and flood impacts.
SEC. 17. <<NOTE: 15 USC 9712.>> AVAILABILITY TO THE PUBLIC OF
FLOOD-RELATED DATA.
(a) <<NOTE: Web posting.>> In General.--The Administrator shall
make flood-related data available to the public on the website of the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
(b) Cost.--The Administrator may make the data under subsection (a)
freely accessible or available at a cost that does not exceed the cost
of preparing the data.
Approved December 27, 2022.
LEGISLATIVE HISTORY--S. 558:
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CONGRESSIONAL RECORD:
Vol. 167 (2021):
Sept. 30, considered and passed
Senate.
Vol. 168 (2022):
Dec. 12, considered in House.
Dec. 14, prior proceedings vacated;
considered and passed House.
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