logo
A Tornado Might Destroy Your Town. The Federal Government Might Never Show Up.

A Tornado Might Destroy Your Town. The Federal Government Might Never Show Up.

Yahoo22-05-2025
Sign up for the Slatest to get the most insightful analysis, criticism, and advice out there, delivered to your inbox daily.
The weather has been just horrific lately throughout the United States. Last week, Chicago and El Paso were hit with the worst dust storms they've seen since the literal Dust Bowl. Over the weekend, states across the Midwest and the South were slammed by at least 100 tornadoes, all followed by baseball-size hail and pummeling rainstorms. The onslaught continued well into Tuesday, damaging thousands of homes and buildings and parks across a trail of 11 states, from Indiana to Minnesota to Oklahoma to Alabama.
CNN Weather reports that 28 people in three states have died as a result. A nor'easter is now making its way over to the East Coast, with 50-mph gusts and inches of rainfall in store for New England. Over Memorial Day weekend, severe thunderstorms are once again projected to slam middle and southern states, stretching from Nebraska down to Texas and out to Florida.
And there may be little if any help arriving for the survivors, thanks to the Trump administration's mass government layoffs.
On Tuesday, St. Louis' mayor told multiple news outlets that the Federal Emergency Management Agency had provided no ground support following the city's billion-dollar tornado disaster—despite direct requests from Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley and the state's Republican governor. (A few FEMA teams belatedly showed up on Wednesday, although Missouri has not yet been approved for emergency services.) In Kentucky, the agency's response was also delayed, and recovery further complicated by outages to Louisville's NOAA Weather Radio transmitters—because they were undergoing much-needed upgrades while storms were still racking the area. The National Weather Service outpost in Jackson, already so understaffed that it no longer operates 24/7, was forced to call in all of its meteorologists overnight to monitor the situation and blast out severe-weather updates. In Kansas, the NWS outfit in Goodland cut its own operating hours just a couple of days before the tornadoes landed. Galveston, Texas, which lies in the storm path, may face extra peril thanks to its broken NOAA radio (which hasn't been fixed since it got knocked out by a fire in March) and an NWS forecasting office with a 44 percent vacancy rate.
These Americans are pulling themselves through a painful postdisaster recovery on the eve of hurricane season; others have been doing so for months and are still waiting for federal assistance. In mid-March, Mississippi was hit by 20 tornadoes that killed seven people and ruined hundreds of homes. But since President Donald Trump never approved a disaster declaration, several still-displaced Mississippians have received no help. Those March tornadoes also hit many of the same states suffering now, like Missouri and Oklahoma. Arkansas asked for federal emergency approval after those March storms, only to be denied at first; the state government appealed and finally got approved for disaster assistance last week, pushing FEMA to add face-to-face assistance sites across the Natural State.
These delays aren't just red tape—they're the result of a hollowed-out federal system. The Trump administration, with the help of anti-government hucksters affiliated with DOGE and Project 2025, has been slashing public-sector jobs so thoroughly that even the nation's preeminent climate and disaster experts haven't been spared. Back in February, DOGE's rampage at the Department of the Interior led to 240 layoffs at the U.S. Geological Survey, an agency that monitors and studies large-scale natural disasters. That same month, the government fired members of the National Science Foundation—whose research has helped improve our weather systems—and axed 800 positions at the already inadequately staffed NOAA. Those funding shortfalls have cut into key NWS operations, like its forecast-modeling weather balloons, Doppler radars, and emergency-translation services (the latter of which were later restored). Earlier this month, the NWS put out a hiring call for dozens of meteorologists and staffers to fill in vacant positions at its field offices, including permanent meteorologists-in-charge for the aforementioned Jackson and Goodland outposts.
As for FEMA, which resides under the Department of Homeland Security—nearly 2,000 employees have taken buyouts this year, meaning that the agency has been running at about four-fifths of its typical capacity. Earlier this month, a FEMA memo obtained by Wired indicated that the agency would stop sending agents to canvass door to door in disaster areas. A couple of weeks ago, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem fired the organization's acting administrator—because he had the temerity to tell Congress that Trump's idea of eliminating FEMA wholesale was probably not the best idea. His replacement, David Richardson, then scrapped FEMA's long-term strategic plan and ordered an internal review of the agency's capabilities. The explicit conclusion: 'FEMA is not ready' for this year's hurricane season, thanks to issues with 'staffing and contracts,' as well as general demoralization from Trump and Noem's disparagement of the agency. (Apparently, remaining staffers have so little respect for Richardson that they send memes to one another mocking the acting chief, per a report from Business Insider.)
If you thought these past few months of catastrophe would inspire the Trump administration to retool its approach, think again. Just this Wednesday, 16 of FEMA's senior executives left the agency. Richardson is now stacking his executive team with DHS staffers who come from other departments—and have zero experience with natural disasters. Trump is also going through with a plan to slash hundreds of millions of dollars delegated to flood-prevention projects in Democratic-led states—and increase such funding to Republican-run states. On top of that, cuts to public-radio support will also leave even fewer channels for emergency communication in remote areas.
It's all especially galling when you remember how the GOP responded to the disasters that hit the U.S. even before Trump's inauguration: the nonsensical critiques of local and federal preparedness for January's California wildfires; the conspiracy theory–fueled death threats aimed at firefighters, FEMA officers, and meteorologists in the wake of Hurricane Milton, demonstrably hobbling relief efforts; baseless claims from Trump and conservative media that Democrats had delayed aid to Republican-led districts and states in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene and instead prioritized immigrants. Such delegitimization of already-underresourced federal institutions has only made it easier for the Trump administration to scythe them further, even as the effects come to harm Trump-friendly states.
The long-term effects of this senseless sabotage will mean that as climate change ramps up the rate and severity of extreme disasters, we will be less able to prepare for them and to repair the damage. As Gabrielle Gurley muses in the American Prospect, the degradation of the U.S. government's world-class public weather systems is a deliberate effort to have private companies pick up the slack—a task that will be impossible for them to achieve at the same scale. The profit motive would keep such firms away from remote, sparsely populated, low-tech communities that need public weather infrastructure the most, such as Kentucky's Amish neighborhoods; it would also mean that these companies would charge for the costs of providing forecasts and information that the feds offer for free thanks to taxes.
We're well on the way to a future of absolute weather uncertainty—no surety to forecasts, a weakened ability to transmit emergency alerts—that we'll nevertheless have to pay for out of our own pockets. What other choice will we have, as climate disasters arrive with more frequency and the federal government makes them even more dangerous?
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Texas flooding live updates: Death toll at 129 as search continues for the missing

time5 hours ago

Texas flooding live updates: Death toll at 129 as search continues for the missing

Kerr County was hit the hardest, with at least 103 deaths. 1:14 At least 129 people are dead from the devastating flooding in the Texas Hill Country. Kerr County was hit the hardest, with at least 103 deaths, including 36 children. President Donald Trump signed a disaster declaration for the county and the Federal Emergency Management Agency is on the ground there. Search and rescue operations are ongoing. Key Headlines 6 minutes ago 129 dead in Texas 4:24 PM EDT Trump defends response, dismisses concerns about alerts 4:23 PM EDT Melania Trump to grieving parents: 'We are grieving with you' 4:07 PM EDT Trump speaks on devastation, ongoing search and recovery efforts 3:21 PM EDT Trump meets with first responders Here's how the news is developing. 29 Updates Jul 08, 2025, 12:21 AM EDT Country musician Pat Green's brother and family missing after Texas flood Country musician Pat Green said his family "suffered a heartbreaking and deeply personal loss" during the flooding in Central Texas. His wife, Kori Green, shared on social media that Pat Green's brother John, his wife, Julia, and their two children remain missing after the Kerrville flood over the weekend. "We are heartbroken and anxiously waiting for all of them to be found," she wrote. -ABC News' Olivia Osteen and Peter Charalambous Jul 07, 2025, 9:42 PM EDT Texas Sen. Ted Cruz calls flooding aftermath 'most horrible thing I've ever seen' Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, called the flooding aftermath at Texas' Camp Mystic -- where at least 27 campers and counselors died amid flooding -- "the most horrible thing I've ever seen." "The water rose 7 and 8 feet … the cabins are cleaned out, all of the furniture has been pulled out by the current," he told Lindsey David on ABC News Live Prime after touring the campground. "It's heartbreaking." Cruz said his daughters have gone to summer camps in Kerr County, in Texas' Hill Country, for 10 years and said just last week, his wife had picked up their youngest daughter from camp. For now, the focus remains on search and rescue, Cruz said, but in the coming weeks and months, he said he hopes to take a look at the timeline of exactly what happened and when warnings went out to see if something could have been done better. "There's no doubt, any one of us, if we had a time machine and we could step in it right now, we would run to those girls' cabins and pull them out of the cabins before the floodwaters rose," he said. "And so it's worth asking, what could have been done differently?" "You know, look, people love to play politics. I was overseas on a family vacation when this happened. I was almost immediately on the phone," Cruz said, adding, "And then I booked a flight and came back." Cruz said he left Sunday morning and arrived in Texas on Sunday night. Jul 07, 2025, 5:56 PM EDT Over 100 dead in Texas Over 100 people have died from flooding in Texas. The vast majority of the fatalities -- 84 -- were in Kerr County. Deaths have also been confirmed in Travis, Williamson, Burnet, Tom Green and Kendall counties. There have been over 850 high-water rescues, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz said. Flash flood warnings issued night before, NWS had 'surge staffing' Questions have swirled around if there was enough warning and enough staffing for the early Friday morning floods in the wake of the Trump administration's job cuts to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. But NOAA confirmed that the National Weather Service's Austin/San Antonio office had five meteorologists working the severe weather event as part of its "surge staffing" protocol. It is normally staffed with two. NOAA also said the NWS had forecast briefings Thursday morning, issued a flood watch Thursday afternoon and then issued flash flood warnings on Thursday night and early Friday. This gave "preliminary lead times of more than three hours before flash flooding conditions occurred," NOAA said in a statement. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Monday, "Blaming President Trump for these floods is a depraved lie, and it serves no purpose during this time of national mourning." Texas Sen. Ted Cruz said Monday, "Some people [are] engaging in partisan games and trying to blame their political opponents for a natural disaster." "I think most normal Americans know that's ridiculous and I think this is not a time for partisan finger pointing and attacks," he said. 'I think it is reasonable, over time, to engage in a retrospective and say, at every level, what could have been done better, because all of us would want to prevent this horrific loss of life," he said. Chuck Schumer, the Senate's top Democrat, is calling for an investigation into whether cuts made to NWS had any correlation to the level of devastation. -ABC News' Lalee Ibssa

Severe weather, tornado warnings in southeastern Wisconsin
Severe weather, tornado warnings in southeastern Wisconsin

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Severe weather, tornado warnings in southeastern Wisconsin

Severe weather is expected in southeastern Wisconsin on July 11. A tornado watch was issued for the Milwaukee area until 11 p.m. while tornado warnings have already been issued elsewhere. A tornado warning was issued in northeastern Rock County, southeastern Dane County and southern Jefferson County until 7:30 p.m., meaning a National Weather Service radar indicated a rotation in the sky and residents should take cover. The storm traveling east from southcentral Wisconsin has already resulted in an evacuation order from the Harley-Davidson festival on Milwaukee's lakefront. During a tornado, the NWS recommends: Get as low as possible. A basement below ground level or the lowest floor of a building offers the greatest safety. Put as many walls between yourself and the outside as possible. Avoid windows. If you're driving, particularly on interstates or highways, do not try to outrun a tornado. If you are driving in an area with a tornado warning, you should look for ways to safely get off the road and out of your vehicle, preferably by seeking refuge in a sturdy building. As a last resort, lie flat in the nearest depression, ditch or culvert and cover your head with your arms. A tornado warning is issued when a tornado is either sighted or indicated on radar, meaning there is imminent danger to life and property. If you are in the area of a tornado warning, take cover immediately in the lowest floor of a sturdy building. If you are outdoors, in a vehicle or a mobile home, move to the closest sturdy shelter and take cover. A tornado watch is issued when the environment is capable of producing tornadoes. If you are located in the area of a tornado watch, the NWS recommends having a plan in place in the event a tornado forms. Be ready to act quickly if a tornado warning is issued. This story will be updated. This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Severe weather, tornado warnings in southeastern Wisconsin on July 11

Texas floods shine spotlight on Trump's weather and disaster cuts
Texas floods shine spotlight on Trump's weather and disaster cuts

Yahoo

time9 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Texas floods shine spotlight on Trump's weather and disaster cuts

The deadly Texas floods are drawing renewed scrutiny to Trump administration cuts at the nation's weather and climate research agencies. A flash flood Friday unleashed water from the Guadalupe River in Central Texas, killing at least 90 people as of Monday afternoon. The incident spurred questions about the preparedness of federal agencies such as the National Weather Service (NWS) and others like it as they face the administration's crosshairs. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which houses NWS, lost hundreds of staffers to Trump administration cuts, and positions within the NWS were among them. The Austin/San Antonio Weather Service office's warning coordination meteorologist, who organizes alerting the outside world about agency forecasts, took a Trump administration buyout in April. The office's Science Operations Officer, who implements new technology and data, also retired around the same time. Rick Spinrad, who led NOAA during the Biden administration, said the office's forecasters still did well, but that staffing-related issues could be causing communication problems. 'I do think the cuts are contributing to the inability of emergency managers to respond,' Spinrad said. 'The Weather Service did a really good job, actually, in getting watches and warnings and … wireless emergency alerts out,' he told The Hill on Monday. 'It's really a little early to give a specific analysis of where things might have broken down, but from what I've seen, it seems like the communications breakdown in the last mile is where most of the problem was.' He particularly pointed to the absence of a warning coordination meteorologist. 'Information went out with significant lead time of several hours, and yet no action was taken,' Spinrad said. 'When you send a message, there's no guarantee that it's received, so someone needs to follow up,' he said. 'In the weather forecast offices, the one who follows up with that is the position called the warning coordination meteorologist. And guess what, there is no WCM in the San Antonio/Austin weather forecast office, because that's one of the positions that was lost in the cuts from this administration.' The Austin/San Antonio Weather Service office issued a flood watch Thursday afternoon, saying areas could get up to 5-7 inches of rainfall. That night, at about 1 a.m. local time Friday, it posted on the social platform X that parts of the state were seeing a flash flood warning. Just after 3 a.m., it posted that 'a very dangerous flash flooding event is ongoing.' 'Heavy rainfall continues in this area and a Flash Flood Warning is in effect. Turn Around, Don't Drown!' the NWS Austin/San Antonio office said. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) called for an investigation into 'the scope, breadth, and ramifications of whether staffing shortages at key local National Weather Service (NWS) stations contributed to the catastrophic loss of life and property during the deadly flooding.' President Trump said staffing cuts didn't impact the handling of the incident. 'That was really the Biden setup … but I wouldn't blame Biden for it, either,' he said. 'This is a hundred-year catastrophe and it's just so horrible to watch.' Erica Grow Cei, a spokesperson for the NWS, said the Austin/San Antonio office as well as the San Angelo office 'had additional forecasters on duty during the catastrophic flooding event in Texas's Hill Country during the July 4 holiday weekend' in an email to The Hill. 'Extra staff members from both offices, in addition to the West Gulf River Forecast Center, had extra personnel on the night of Thursday, July 3 into the day on Friday, July 4. All forecasts and warnings were issued in a timely manner,' she said. 'Additionally, these offices were able to provide decision support services to local partners, including those in the emergency management community. The NWS remains dedicated to our mission to serve the American public through our forecasts and decision support services.' It is not the first time the administration's buyouts and other mass firings have come under scrutiny. Earlier this year, the National Nuclear Security Administration rehired staff that oversees the nation's nuclear weapons after firing them en masse. Following staffing cuts, the NWS indicated it was looking to shuffle or hire employees to fill positions in some 'critically understaffed' offices, though the Austin/San Antonio and San Angelo ones were not among them. Tom Di Liberto, a former NOAA climate scientist and public affairs specialist, told The Hill he believes that even with the staffing cuts, the administration should still be able to get the forecast out. However, he warned that other functions that help the NWS do its job such as building relationships could be diminished by the cuts. 'My big concern is, when it comes to the staffing shortages and the loss of expertise, that we've lost, not only their knowledge … knowledge of their regions — what areas flood, what areas are most of concern — but we also lost the relationships with existing partners and external partners,' Di Liberto said. Staffing cuts are not the only potential headwind coming for the nation's meteorologists. In its proposed budget, the Trump administration is calling for broader cuts to research. This includes eliminating NOAA's Office of Atmospheric Research and reducing the budget for the agency's weather research program It also includes closing the Atlantic Oceanographic & Meteorological Laboratory in Miami, the National Severe Storms Laboratory in Oklahoma and other labs in places including New Jersey, Colorado and Hawaii. Di Liberto said such cuts would mean that 'we don't have the data and resources that we need to be able to improve our ability to forecast and communicate these risks.' Spinrad similarly expressed concerns that the cuts would hamper the administration's ability to improve. 'The cuts — as proposed — to research guarantee that we will see no improvement to forecasts and services full stop,' he said. He added that, typically, forecasts 'improve by 24 hours every 10 years,' so a '72-hour forecast today is as good as the 48-hour forecast was 10 years ago, and that's because of the research.' 'If you turn off the research, that progress and improvement is going to stop, and you're going to see a degradation of capability,' Spinrad said. Since the federal budget is handled by Congress and not the administration, it's not clear how many of the newly anticipated cuts will actually stick. But there are also staffing cuts happening broadly across the administration, including at other related agencies such as the National Science Foundation. 'Basic science research has been trimmed pretty dramatically,' said David Stensrud, president of the American Meteorological Society. 'The scientific enterprise as a whole is being proposed for really large cuts. That could really hurt what we're trying to do to improve these kinds of warnings.' Meanwhile, the Trump administration has also indicated it wants to eliminate the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), which helps respond after disasters. Asked over the weekend whether he still wanted to phase out FEMA, Trump said, 'FEMA is something we can talk about later, but right now they're busy working.' White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said Monday that 'the president wants to ensure American citizens always have what they need during times of need. Whether that assistance comes from states or the federal government, that's a policy discussion that will continue, and the president has always said he wants states to do as much as they can, if not more.' Brett Samuels contributed. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store