Scientists warn of consequences as over 800 NOAA workers are fired: 'Censoring science does not change the facts'
· 13h · on MSN
800 federal workers fired at NOAA, which impacts weather forecasts, Great Lakes science
· 1d
Trump administration layoffs hit NOAA, agency that forecasts weather, hurricanes
Gov. Ron DeSantis said Friday he supports DOGE, but also praised the National Hurricane Center and said it will probably be "OK."
The two rounds of departures together represent about 10 percent of NOAA’s roughly 13,000 employees. A spokesman for the agency did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The flag was removed by the city to maintain the natural area, staying consistent with its practice of removing abandoned and unauthorized items and displays from open space lands.
NOAA's staff oversees monitoring the world's atmosphere and the nation's weather and climate, including its most violent storms.
Scientists and researchers are warning that the Trump Administration's firing of hundreds of workers at NOAA — the agency that provides U.S. forecasts for the government — could put American lives at risk.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) was hit with significant layoffs this week, with hundreds of employees terminated in another round of job cuts spearheaded by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) under the Trump administration that has sparked backlash from many weather experts.
NOAA's weather data is freely available and critical for meteorologists to create accurate forecasts. But that's not all NOAA does. How its different divisions impact your life.
Mark Eakin, a recently retired NOAA veteran who ran its Coral Reef Watch program for many years, told the Miami Herald he was alarmed by the “indiscriminate” slashes throughout the agency, which oversees everything from cutting-edge climate research to day-to-day operations that farmers and fishers rely on, as well as life-saving weather warnings.
Sources said on Thursday that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration became the latest federal agency to be hit with job cuts, possibly affecting up to 1,830 probationary workers.
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