Part-Time Customer Experience Associate - Youth Learning
City of Jacksonville
Posted: February 9, 2026 (1 day ago)
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Space Systems Command
Department of the Air Force
Location
Salary
$90,173 - $139,398
per year
Type
Full Time
More Other jobs →Closes
Entry salary: $74,441 | Full performance (GS-13): up to $115,079
Career ladder: Start at GS-12 and advance to GS-13 with experience.
Typical requirements: 1 year specialized experience at GS-11. Advanced degree + significant experience.
Note: Actual salary includes locality pay (15-40%+ depending on location).
This job involves monitoring weather conditions to ensure safe space rocket launches from Cape Canaveral, Florida, including providing forecasts, briefings, and final go/no-go decisions on launch days.
You'll work closely with launch teams and other experts to protect operations across a vast area.
It's ideal for an experienced meteorologist who thrives in high-pressure, team-based settings and enjoys contributing to national space missions.
To submit your resume for this Direct Hire opportunity click here.
For additional information on other USSF direct hire opportunities visit the Air Force Civilian Careers Space Force website and follow USSF on LinkedIn.
The 1340 series does not have an individual occupational requirement that must be met and can be viewed here. There is no Group Coverage Qualification Standard for this series. Major Duties:
The United States Space Force (USSF) The 45th Weather Squadron at Cape Canaveral SFS, Florida is seeking to hire a Launch Weather Officer in support of Space Launch Delta 45.
(NH-1340-03, GS-12/13 Equivalent) Description: Why work for Space Launch Delta 45?
Space Launch Delta 45 is the World's Premier Gateway to Space, delivering assured space launch and combat capabilities for the nation.
As part of Space Launch Delta 45, the 45th Weather Squadron exploits the weather to assure access to air and space.
The 45th Weather Squadron is responsible for providing tailored forecasts and resource protection for the Eastern Range, spanning over 15 million square miles.
Comprised of Active Duty Air Force and Space Force Civilian Personnel, the squadron supports various operations, ranging from aviation forecasting to prescribed burns and ground transports to rocket launches.
We're seeking an experienced and operationally focused Meteorologist to fill the position of Launch Weather Officer.
As a Launch Weather Officer, you will play a mission-critical role in the success and safety of space launch operations.
You will be the subject matter expert on all atmospheric and space weather conditions, relied upon by Launch Service Providers to guide their operational decision making from generation phase activities through launch.
On day-of-launch, you will evaluate weather conditions against a pre-set suite of rules and thresholds called Launch Commit Criteria, in which you will provide GO/NO-GO calls for launch.
When not directly supporting day-of-launch events, you will produce tailored weather forecasts and provide weather briefings on a routine basis for various operations occurring across the Range.
Come join a team of high functioning Meteorologists impacting the future of space operations! Desired Skills/Expertise: 1.
Bachelor's degree or higher in meteorology (preferred), atmospheric science, or other natural science.
IAW with OPM Guidance on the 1340 Job Series: https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/classification-qualifications/general-schedule-qualification-standards/1300/meteorology-series-1340/ 2.
Knowledge of professional meteorological concepts, principles, techniques, and practices, including weather observation, forecasting, communications, and support procedures to serve as the Launch Weather Officer responsible for the entire spectrum of weather services provided to launch operations.
3. Knowledge of advanced meteorological theories, concepts, principles, and processes to develop and validate new requirements, technical approaches, product proposals, etc. 4.
Knowledge of current and emerging weather technology, to include instrumentation, equipment, systems, and numerical weather prediction models. 5.
Skill in weather radar interrogation and familiarization with Gibson Ridge radar software. 6.
Knowledge of tropical weather forecasting techniques and the ability to properly message impacts of tropical storms and hurricanes to a wide audience. 7.
Ability to set priorities and make high-quality decisions in a fast-paced, high-stress, teamwork-oriented operational environment governed by rapidly changing deadlines and shifting work schedules with the expectation of superior coordination and collaboration with launch service providers, scientists and technicians, and other professionals (DoW, other federal agencies, contractors, academia, etc.).
8. Ability to teach/mentor and communicate clearly, concisely, and with technical accuracy, both orally and in writing.
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