KBA-99 Hawaii NWR Broadcast

ID (Paul): "This is NOAA Weather Radio station KBA-99 serving the Aloha
State and broadcasting from the National Weather Service forecast office in
Honolulu."

Synopsis (Craig)

Forecast (Craig): "Here's the forecast for the islands of Kauai, Oahu, Maui,
Molokai, and Lanai . . . " - "Here's the forecast for the Big Island . . ."

Hourly Weather Roundup (Donna): "At (time) . . . at the Honolulu
International Airport [full report] . . .. Weather and temperatures
elsewhere around the state . . . at (see Note 1 below)"

Coastal Wind Observations: (Human voice, updated every 3 hours): "Here are
the (time - 11 am, 2 pm, 5 pm, etc.) coastal wind observations, wind speeds
are in knots . . . (see Note 1 below)"

Coastal Marine Information & Forecasts (Donna):
"The synopsis for all Hawaiian waters . . . The forecast for all waters
within 40 nautical miles of shore . . . For the channels between the islands
. . ."

Oahu Surf Forecast (Craig): "Here's the surf forecast for Oahu . . . east
shore . . . south shore . . . north shore. . . west shore . .. Surf heights
are forecast at the face, or front of waves."

Notes:
1) For the Hourly Weather Roundup & wind observations, I did not get every
location mentioned because I could not decipher all the Hawaiian town names
broadcast in audio only. However, I got what I could:
HWR: Kailua, Waianae, Lihue, Lanai City, Molokai Airport, Hilo, Kona
coastal wind observations: Port Allen, Princeville, Lihue, Kahoolawe,
Kahului

2) Full station ID broadcast at :30 & :60. It identifies the station KBA-99
as broadcasting on frequencies 162.550 & 162.400 in the Hawaiian Islands,
and identifies transmitter locations, but does not identify individual call
signs (WWF-39, WWG-27, WWG-74, WWG-75). So, there is one broadcast for all
Hawaii transmitters.

3) They were running an announcement (by Donna) that they were considering
changing the number of issuances of coastal marine forecasts from 4 times a
day to 2. Issuance times would be at 6 am & 6 pm, with updates issued as
required. They were soliciting public comments and gave the phone number and
e-mail where people could send their comments.