US Where local forecast offices no longer monitor weather around-the-clock

Link: https://www.washingtonpost.com/weather/2025/05/16/weather-service-offices-overnight-cuts-map/
Archive: https://archive.ph/V1X06


For at least half a century, the National Weather Service has been an around-the-clock operation. But after the U.S. DOGE Service led efforts to shrink the federal government, that is no longer possible in some parts of the country.
In four of the agency’s 122 weather forecasting offices around the country, there aren’t enough meteorologists to staff an overnight shift, according to the National Weather Service Employees Organization, a union representing agency workers. And at least several more forecast offices are expected to stop staffing an overnight shift as early as Sunday.
Each of the offices has local knowledge about weather hazards and geographic features that helps improve the accuracy of weather forecasts and warnings and inform local officials’ decisions to close schools for wintry weather or evacuate residents ahead of hurricanes. Without a meteorologist working overnight, those offices’ duties to monitor conditions and issue forecasts and warnings will temporarily pass to neighboring offices each night, said Tom Fahy, the union’s legislative director.
At an agency whose staff have a strong commitment to their lifesaving work, he said, the circumstances have stretched employees’ resilience “to the breaking point” and “hobbled the agency’s esprit de corps.”
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the parent agency of the Weather Service, “remains adequately staffed to ensure that critical research continues and that actionable data continues to be released to the public as regularly scheduled,” spokeswoman Kim Doster said in an email. “NOAA anticipates no loss of critical information to the American people.”
The agency is meanwhile seeking to transfer employees to the most critically understaffed offices to fill gaps. Doster said it is also seeking hiring authority — NOAA and the Weather Service remain subject to a hiring freeze imposed in January — while also pursuing “a reevaluation of resource allocation and priorities across all line offices within the bureau.”
Weather Service staffing numbered more than 4,200 employees before President Donald Trump took office for his second term. But so far this year, the workforce has contracted by nearly 600 people — the same number of departures the agency saw across the past decade and a half, Fahy said.

Here is where those departures are hitting hardest.

California and the West
Weather Service forecast offices in Hanford, California, and Sacramento, in the state’s agricultural and mostly rural Central Valley, are no longer able to operate an overnight shift, leaving coastal offices that oversee the Bay Area and greater Los Angeles to cover for them.
The cutback in operating hours comes just as the traditional wildfire season begins in California. The Weather Service plays a key role in forecasting when dry air and strong winds elevate risks of fires sparking and spreading rapidly.
It is also expected that a Weather Service office in Pendleton, Oregon, which oversees a wide swath of southern Washington and northwestern Oregon, will soon be unable to operate overnight, though it was not yet clear when that might happen, Fahy said.
The overnight closure of the forecast office in Fairbanks, Alaska, affects most of that state’s land area — all of northern Alaska, including towns all along its Arctic coastline and the Bering Strait.

The Plains
A forecast office in sparsely populated northwestern Kansas has been one of the hardest hit by retirements and firings and is no longer operating overnight, Fahy said.
It is one of the facilities Weather Service officials are asking employees to voluntarily transfer to, offering paid moving expenses. Positions for three senior meteorologists at the Kansas office are among 155 critical vacancies at Weather Service offices that the agency is seeking to fill by the end of the month, according to an email sent to agency employees that was obtained by The Washington Post.
A forecasting office that oversees conditions across southwestern Wyoming and eastern Nebraska is scheduled to stop staffing an overnight shift Sunday, Fahy said.
These offices lie in what is called “Tornado Alley,” and as peak tornado season continues, this area is at the heart of a swath that has faced relentless thunderstorms, twisters and flooding rains for weeks this year.

The Eastern U.S.
There are some critical vacancies at offices along the Eastern Seaboard and the Gulf Coast — including offices in Texas and Louisiana that are facing the threat of tropical cyclones when hurricane season starts June 1. But so far, the densely populated eastern part of the country is not affected by overnight Weather Service closures.
Still, one office in eastern Kentucky — a region hit repeatedly by deadly and damaging floods in recent years — is already closing for the overnight hours. And a facility on Michigan’s Upper Peninsula is expected to begin overnight closures Sunday.
 

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too bad NOAA, maybe if you and the rest of the government had focused on neural science research that benefited all Americans this could have been avoided but you spent all your time and money on nigger worship and cherry picking data to promote your climate doomer death cult

time for you to get downsized
 
Weather forecasters and the news team in general are welfare employees. They serve absolutely zero purpose whatsoever.
Let’s just go back to weathergirls that are hired based entirely on how hot they are and how big their boobs and/or asses are, and just cut the pretense. Not like they get the weather right anyways.
 
Let’s just go back to weathergirls that are hired based entirely on how hot they are and how big their boobs and/or asses are, and just cut the pretense. Not like they get the weather right anyways.
Latin American countries do that currently still i think but it would be funny to make the "news" solely about entertaining the viewers.
 
The only concern I have about this is the potential, in areas that get sudden unexpected events like wildfires, for people not to get notified in time to get out, and winding up fucking burned to a crisp.
That's less likely to arise from a lack of warning than from constant warning. Where I live is statistically fire- and tornado-prone, and I get scary-exlamation-point! weather warnings almost every fucking day. They used to come only when a fire or tornado might actually happen. It's a recent change and it's propaganda, like how the BBC made all its temperature maps red to make you think you're gonna boil to death because it's an average June day. Everyone ignores "the weather" now.
 
Weather nigger is the only job where you can just straight lie to everyone, sometimes on live TV, and nothing can happen to you for that. Even politicians sometimes are forced to tell some of the truth.
 
That's less likely to arise from a lack of warning than from constant warning. Where I live is statistically fire- and tornado-prone, and I get scary-exlamation-point! weather warnings almost every fucking day. They used to come only when a fire or tornado might actually happen. It's a recent change and it's propaganda, like how the BBC made all its temperature maps red to make you think you're gonna boil to death because it's an average June day. Everyone ignores "the weather" now.
Nothing makes me laugh like seeing "28C" in giant bold letters on a red background because in most of the USA that's considered a mild day come summer.

Around here its anywhere from 33-35C as the summer average. And I live in the relatively mild Pacific Northwest.
 
The NWS is part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Just in case you didn't know what kind of organisation this is, here's a page from their 2024 budget summary.

The opening words are,
"As NOAA tackles the climate crisis by building a climate-ready nation, it will strive to ensure the needs of the Nation’s underserved and vulnerable communities are met. To meet this challenge, NOAA is making equity central to every facet of its mission delivery services and is working internally to create a model agency that draws from the full diversity of the nation, where everyone is treated with dignity and respect. "

Strangely none of this appears in the Washington Post description. When all of this has been expunged (along with those responsible for it) from the organisation I might take your funding pleas seriously.
"How will this help us monitor the weather?"
"Weather?"
 
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The only concern I have about this is the potential, in areas that get sudden unexpected events like wildfires, for people not to get notified in time to get out, and winding up fucking burned to a crisp. In the area where the Fort is a fire can break out in the middle of the night and if the weather radio alert doesn't wake you up you could find yourself in a real fucking problem. The county has a fire alert system but it depends on cell phones and while that's fine for the valleys there are people in mountainous areas where cell phone reception is iffy at the best of times. And of course the mountains are more susceptible to fires suddenly starting up and going loco in a very short time. And then there's Tornado Alley, where a twister could spring up in the middle of the night and you wouldn't know til you felt yourself being ripped to shreds. I dunno where the line is between rooting out woke DIE shit and making sure that people don't fucking die, but DOGE's approach is making me a little nervous.
The national weather service issues warnings about the potential for fires to happen they don't actually alert the public when a fire breaks out. At least in the state I live it's the fire department that does that. Fire departments generally have stations located by the most major road in rural areas and they do outreach to residents which include emergency shelter locations if a fire hits quickly.

No one living in a rural area is going to see smoke and go "Hmmm guess I'll wait for the authorities to tell me if it's serious or not." Fire warnings are like "do not drink" labels on bleach. Is it dry? Is it windy? Then probably best not to throw coals outside.
 
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