New Ward
We had a chance to attend church for the first time last week. The ward is quite friendly and made a concerted effort to reach out to us our first week there. Because of the geographical location, it is an interesting mix of younger couples (relatively larger primary) and established couples. The younger couples tend to be somewhat transient. The bishop is relatively young and quite energetic. He seemed nicely goal oriented (perhaps because we were meeting on Dec. 31). Ward and stake goals were driven more be developing Christ-like and Zion characteristics rather than numbers, which I think will be positive. I'm optimistic we'll fit in well.
There are two missionaries assigned to the ward, Sis. Hansen and Sis. Kleven, whom we invited over for dinner on Wednesday. They are both quite pleasant, poised and comfortable talking about the gospel, and carry a great spirit with them. I'll feel comfortable referring friends to learn the gospel from them as we meet new people here.
There doesn't seem to be a ward choir organized here, which I will miss. There seems to be some reasonable musical talent in the ward, so it should be possible to get one going. Perhaps we can be a catalyst for getting one started. It's more challenging to get people to stay for or come to choir practice when the travel distance to church is farther, as it is here. It takes us about 20 minutes to drive to church and would take others somewhat longer.
The church meets in a beautiful location on the banks of the Potomac River. We drive along the George Washington Parkway most of the way to get there. It is pretty now in the winter, but will be prettier still in Spring when the many trees have their leaves back.
My First Week at NSF
Here is a picture of the building where I work Deon took from our bedroom window at 7:00 in the morning.
The National Science Foundation is the building on the right. You can see parking and a little bit of the tracks for the Eisenhower station of the Metrorail on the lower left. The road on the center left is the belt root we use to get to Allison and Davey's house to to drive into DC.
I spent almost all of my time this week getting settled into the new job. NSF is an interesting mix of academia and government service. The program directors and supervisors I work with all have academic backgrounds, so our conversations tend to be pretty academic, though on the administrative side of academia. The scope is national rather than institutional however, which is more like the conversations I had on AAPT and APS committees:
- What can we do to improve the training of undergraduate STEM students in the United States?
- What are the big trends in STEM undergraduate education in the US for the next decade?
- How are the national leaders behind various big ideas, and how can we channel NSF resources to help them accomplish their efforts?
The head of the organization is appointed by the President and approved by the Senate. The "board of directors" is the National Science Board, a distinguished group of some of the most prominent science leaders in the U.S.
The government bureaucracy part of the job is evident as well. We had a cold snap and a winter storm this week which caused government offices to delay opening on Thursday by two hours. That decision was made by the Office of Personnel Management (OPM in government alphabet soup talk) rather than by individual agencies (more about that later). I'm used to those kinds of decisions being more local.
The staff employees are the bureaucratic government part of the organization. I've found them to be friendly, competent, and helpful. They are used to working within well-defined parameters of government regulations and procedures, but capable of recognizing how to work within those parameters to accomplish what needs to be done.
There is less grousing about the complications in our operations occasioned by the shifting sands of congressional and executive branch whims than I imagined. It's frustrating to not always have control over a long term direction in funding and operational priorities, but people seem to adapt to that pretty well in order to move forward with a defined mission we're all passionate about. There are frequent and healthy internal discussions about how we can do our jobs more efficiently, more effectively, and in ways to have the biggest impact on national science.
Given the many government regulations and policies, I've found that things which were relatively simple at BYU, like getting an office or a computer, are more complicated here. I spent more of this week getting a computer with appropriate access to the internal network, getting a badge (security is a much bigger deal than at BYU), an filling out various orientation forms and reports. I'm learning that it is helpful to be able to figure out which office has people with which expertise. Hopefully I'll be more established next week and have a more permanent office, a telephone, and the like.
I'm also having to learn to be careful about communications I have with people outside NSF. Since I have a ".nsf.gov" email address the emails are public and my communications an be considered as an official government statement. In some ways its similar to situations at BYU, where I needed to make clear that my opinions were my own and didn't represent an official opinion of BYU usually.
A Cold Snap
The geographical perspective on weather was interesting this week as the East Coast got hit with a blast of cold and a winter storm. The temperatures have been in the teens or lower at the coldest times and got below zero with the wind chill. It seems colder than the coldest days I remember in the Provo because of the higher humidity. On the other hand, the amount of actual snow, as you'll not in the picture above, is pretty small compared to big storms we've had in Utah. However, because the weather was unusually cold for Virginia and they don't often have even this much snow, it resulted in school being cancelled and government offices delaying their opening times. It caught me a bit by surprize. I didn't even think to check the radio to see if there would be any changes in operating times, because the weather didn't seem that severe to me. (Of course, I only needed to walk half a block to get to work.) When I arrived at NSF, the only other people there were the three people from Minnesota who were accustomed to working in much more severe winter conditions.
Allison's Race
The cold didn't stop our daughter, Allison, from running a 5k on Jan. 1. We were pleased to be able to see her. She took first place in the women and had a very good time considering the weather.
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Allison near the start of her run. |
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Still looking good near the end of the run. |
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Allison getting her award is first-place woman finisher. |
Allison was excited that they let her break the tape when she finished. She seems confident about running the Boston Marathon this spring.
Bob's and Carole's Visit
A nice thing about living in the DC area is that is a central location a lot of people visit. Deon will be babysitting for our daughter, Carole, this weekend while she is here attending a conference. Bob had an unexpected stop in DC because of weather related delays in a trip to a conference in Philadelphia this week. It was fun to see him at Allison's and Davey's house.