Hey, Elon, we told you it was a bad idea
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The National Weather Service is now able to reverse many of the DOGE cuts and will rehire hundreds of meteorologists foolishly let go earlier this year. |
Now that Musk and Donald Trump saw their famous bromance break up, a few pockets of the federal government are reconsidering these cuts.
Thankfully, the National Weather Service is one of those agencies.
"The National Weather Service has received permission to hire 450 meteorologists, hydrologists, and radar technicians just months after being hit hard by Department of Government Efficiency-related cuts and early retirement incentives.
The new hiring number includes 126 new positions that were previously approved and will apply to 'front line mission critical' personnel, a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration official told CNN."
This whole thing is so stupid, anyway. Pretty much everyone warned we were losing the people needed to keep Americans safe from storms and other weather hazards. Now, taxpayer dollars are going to train new employees, when just months ago we had experienced meteorologist who were already there and needed no onboarding.
"How much time/money is it going to cost to train a bunch of new people when we had already-trained people in place,' asked another NOAA official, who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media. It is possible that some of the new hires will have been previously trained employees who were let go in the DOGE cuts."
Outcry does work sometimes even in the era of Trump. Both Democratic and Republican lawmakers have argued for a public safety exemption for NWS employees, much like law enforcement is exempted from cuts due to their central role in keeping us safe.
The new hires will ease but not erase critical staffing shortages in National Weather Service offices across the nation. It's unclear if some of the weather balloon launches that had been suspended due to the shortages will resume.
Those weather balloon launches are necessary to gauge complex atmospheric factors that greatly influence the severity of tornadoes, flash floods and other dangerous weather.
This rehiring, and the renewal of some services the National Weather Service relies upon, sets back, at least for now, the dream of some in the MAGA crowd to privatize weather forecasting in the U.S.
The National Weather Service offers the bulk of its data free to the public, including private weather forecasting companies.
Project 2025, the Heritage Foundation playbook that the Trump administration seems to be following, had said that the NWS "should fully commercialize its forecasting operations."
In other words, a private entity should take over forecasting for profit. Which always means higher costs and poorer results for us. And would it lead to a world in which we receive tornado, flash flood and hurricane warnings only if we can afford to pay for them? Does it mean low income people don't "deserve" life-saving warnings?
I'm not sure, but that seems to be the idea.
For now, we're safe from that dystopian idea.
Meanwhile, it will take months to rehire the National Weather Service meteorologists. Hurricane season is now in full swing. Dangerous flash floods, wildfires, heat waves and other hazards continue to affect large parts of the nation.
We've so far been lucky that the National Weather Service staff shortages haven't endangered public safety very much. Let's hope that continues until everybody's is rehired, and beyond.
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