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NOAA Slashes 600 Jobs at Weather Agencies
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has axed roughly 600 jobs across its workforce. Cuts hit the National Weather Service and National Hurricane Center amid budget tightening NBC reports. This move threatens forecasting and climate research at a time when storms and wildfires rage with growing fury.
NOAA officials blame flat funding from Congress for the layoffs now slashing 5 percent of staff. The lost roles include meteorologists and support workers vital to daily weather updates. Critics fear gaps in storm tracking could put lives at risk down the line.
The National Weather Service provides forecasts relied on by millions and first responders. Hurricane Center bulletins guide evacuations that save countless lives each season. Scaling back now seems reckless to many as extreme weather spikes nationwide.
Lawmakers on both sides decry the cuts but split on fixes. Some demand more funding to restore jobs and bolster climate defenses. Others push NOAA to trim fat and focus on core missions not green agendas they call bloated.
The layoffs follow Trump’s return and his pick of Elon Musk to lead DOGE efficiency audits. Musk’s team targets agencies like NOAA for waste as part of a leaner government pledge. Supporters say it’s overdue while foes warn of gutted public safety nets.
Weather experts say losing 600 skilled hands will strain an already stretched system. They point to record heat and hurricane chaos as proof more not less capacity is needed. NOAA insists it can still deliver with smarter resource use skeptics doubt.
Past budget squeezes forced NOAA to delay satellite upgrades slowing storm data. These fresh cuts could echo that pain hobbling real-time warnings Americans expect. Rural areas with spotty coverage may feel the pinch hardest observers note.
The clash pits fiscal hawks against those urging robust disaster prep in a warming world. It’s a microcosm of bigger fights over government’s role and reach. How NOAA weathers this storm could shape trust in forecasts for years ahead.
Coverage Details
| Total News Sources | 38 |
| Left | 13 |
| Right | 10 |
| Center | 12 |
| Unrated | 3 |
| Bias Distribution | 34% Left |
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