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Despite promises of rehiring, the National Weather Service remains dangerously low on staff. Burnout looms large and that could hurt public safety in the U.S. |
The stupid staff firings led by the odious Elon Musk last winter and spring, along with resignations and retirements means 600 workers, or about one in every seven, left the National Weather Service.
Adequate staffing at the National Weather Service is at about 4,500 employees. Right now, they're well south of 4,000.
According to the Washington Post:
"Some National Weather Service staffers are working double shifts to keep forecasting offices open. Others are operating under a 'buddy system,' in which adjacent offices help monitor severe weather in understaffed regions. Still others are jettisoning services deemed not absolutely necessary, such as making presentations to schoolchildren."
Somehow, National Weather Service storm monitoring and weather forecasting have gone almost without any interruptions.
However, just think if two big weather emergencies happened at once. I don't know whether the NWS would have been able to handle it. Take this week for example,
Hurricane Humberto and soon to be hurricane Imelda have been very close together in the Atlantic Ocean, making forecasting difficult. .But neither storm is a direct threat to the United States, so forecasting for the two tropical systems is being managed OK.
But what if everything was further west. Imagine a scenario in which Hurricane Humberto was about to make landfall in the Carolinas while at the same time Imelda was threatening Houston or New Orleans.
Would the National Weather Service have the bandwidth to manage both crises? Once upon a time, they would. Right now, I'm not so sure.
CURRENT NWS SITUATION
The Trump administration did a reversal earlier this year and granted the National Weather Service an exemption to a government-wide hiring freeze. But the fresh hiring largely hasn't happened yet.
The incoming new NOAA director, Neil Jacobs, has pledged to address the staff shortages, but a U.S. Senate Committee just barely advanced his nomination on September 17.
NOAA staffers, including most everyone at the National Weather Service are working overtime. Their work/life balance is shot to hell. WaPo says managers are picking up forecasting shifts. Some offices are sharing their employees remotely with locations that don't have enough staff. That requires overtime and working weekends.
Even worse, if the government shuts down this week, NWS meteorologists considered essential employees. So they would be working without pay on top of everything else. At least until Congress and Donald Trump finally decide to get their act together.
Good luck with that.
There was a lot of concern this spring and summer that overstretched NWS meteorologists would miss things like rapidly developing tornadoes and flash floods. If that has happened, it's been rare. I haven't come across data showing whether or not forecasts for dangerous weather have degraded under the Trump regime.
Stay tuned for eventual studies and research on that topic.
Here's an example of the potential danger. The National Weather Service office in central Texas was able to issue timely flash flood warnings ahead of and during the epic and deadly July 4 weekend Texas Hill Country flash floods. Those floods still claimed more than 130 lives, despite the warnings.
At the time of the flood, the Austin/San Antonio NWS office which covers the area hit by the flood, was understaffed by six employees. One of the vacant positions at that NWS office was warning coordinator.
The warning coordinator is the one who alerts local officials to danger. In the Texas flood, local officials appear not to have responded adequately to the warnings. Early indications are that was not primarily the fault of the National Weather Service. However, communication between the NWS and local emergency officials is still under investigation, the Texas Standard reports.
Three months after the flood, the Austin/San Antonio NWS office is now seven employees short of fully staffed. The warning coordinator position is still unfilled.
EXHAUSTED STAFF
Meanwhile, the longer the meteorologists are overworked, the more likely the will start to miss things.
That could cost lives.
"They're going to run out of gas," John Sokich, a retired National Weather Service employee told the Washington Post. "They're going to start missing things. You can't sustain that level of effort for much longer."
A NOAA spokesperson blandly said that the NWS "remains equipped to meet its mission of protecting American lives and property through timely forecasts and critical decision support services."
Yeah, only because NWS meteorologists are now practically killing themselves accomplishing that mission.
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