I’m a meteorologist, and breaking NOAA would undermine journalists’ ability to cover the story our audiences care about most.
NOAA faces funding cuts affecting 600 scientists agency-wide as San Diego experiences an atmospheric river, raising concerns about future weather preparedness.
Cuts to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration affect research and sea monitoring partnerships between NOAA and Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
Fired NOAA scientists detail how federal layoffs could impact NorCal coast 'for generations to come'
Former researchers with NOAA are speaking out about the wave of federal layoffs, raising concerns about important work that could now be in jeopardy and how their dismissals could impact the Bay Area coastline.
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'Not going to fight for my job': NOAA employee deflated by federal cuts
Hundreds of NOAA employees laid off in latest cuts to federal workforce
Some 880 employees of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration were laid off on Thursday, a congressional source told CBS News.
Federal cuts hit NOAA, gutting small agencies with big responsibilities
NOAA is made up of several branches that each handle a different climate control entity, such as environment satellites, fisheries, and the National Weather Service.
Scientists worry there will be immediate harm from the Trump administration's latest federal workforce cuts, which hit NOAA and the National Weather Service.
By coincidence, a research ship pulled up to Los Angeles as the deadly wildfires were burning thousands of homes, incinerating plastic, paint, asbestos and car batteries.
At least 500 staffers, mostly probationary workers including 375 who work at NOAA’s National Weather Service offices nationwide, were notified via email.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is the latest U.S. government agency to face layoffs as the Trump administration continues slashing the federal workforce. Some of the cuts are in Newport,
Newsweek on MSN10d
California Map Shows Where Land Is Sinking FastestA recent study by a NASA-led team has detailed the areas of California where land is sinking, or rising, the most. While NASA 's report said the changes seemed insignificant as they amounted to just fractions of an inch per year, it noted that they can affect local flood risks, wave exposure, and saltwater intrusion.
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