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National Weather Service Hiring While Fake Science is Being Pushed

National Weather Service Hiring While Fake Science is Being Pushed

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Recent reports highlight significant disruptions and policy shifts across several key federal agencies, including the National Weather Service (NWS), Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), and Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), under the current Trump administration. These changes, characterized by deep federal cuts, staffing reductions, and attempts to alter climate science narratives, have raised serious concerns about public safety, environmental protection, and the integrity of scientific information. While some efforts are underway to restore staffing, the long-term implications of these policies are a major concern.

  1. Severe Staffing Cuts and Under-resourcing in Critical Public Safety Agencies:
  • National Weather Service (NWS): The NWS experienced "sweeping cuts" earlier this year, losing "more than 500 people" due to the Trump administration's efforts to reshape the federal workforce. This resulted in a total of "more than 550 people" fewer staff since the administration began.
  • The Bay Area NWS office in Monterey, for instance, lost a meteorologist, an administrative support assistant, and a facilities technician. The Fremont-based Center Weather Service Unit in Oakland was left with a "single full-time meteorologist" after a forecaster retired, operating with two prior vacant positions.
  • These cuts led to NWS offices being "no longer able to operate overnight" and some curtailing "daily launches of weather balloons that send back critical data to power forecasts and forecast models."
  • Current employees are working "additional hours with additional responsibilities" to maintain 24/7 operations, facing "pretty daunting" stress, especially for those like the "lone wolf" meteorologist in the Bay Area.
  • There is now a plan to hire "hundreds of new employees," with 450 "critical positions" identified, potentially filling up to 770 empty positions. The NWS has been granted direct hiring authority and meteorologists are now classified as "necessary for public safety," exempting them from future hiring freezes. However, the process of filling these roles typically "takes months."
  • Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA): FEMA has "lost thousands of staff to layoffs, retirements and resignations since Trump took office." This understaffing was acutely felt after the Texas floods in July 2025.
  • Most calls to the federal aid hotline in the week after the Texas floods "went unanswered" because the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) "let funding lapse" for call center staffing agreements.
  • Internal FEMA logs show that from July 6-10, FEMA answered only "just over 15,000 of the approximately 55,000 calls" from disaster survivors. On July 7th, only "10% of the more than 15,000 calls" were answered.
  • The funding lapse was attributed to an "administrative bottleneck created by the Trump administration," where Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem "personally signs off on all funding requests for more than $100,000," a change from previous administrations.
  1. Systematic Undermining of Climate Science and Environmental Protections:
  • Altering Climate Reports and Data: The Trump administration is actively seeking to "update" the US's premier climate crisis reports, known as National Climate Assessment (NCA) reports.
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