Weather experts predict that Elon Musk's latest round of government firings at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), including at the National Weather Service, will almost certainly make it more difficult to predict dangerous weather emergencies as quickly as needed.
A crowd of federal workers, supporters and lawmakers rallied Monday outside the headquarters of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in Maryland, protesting job cuts by President Donald Trump’s administration. News4’s Joseph Olmo spoke with Reps. Jamie Raskin and Glenn Ivey of Maryland.
‘An act of sabotage’: Hundreds of NOAA and National Weather Service employees laid off
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.
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NOAA begins cutting hundreds of employees
The cuts could have life-or-death consequences, according to critics of the Elon Musk-led Department of Government Efficiency.
2dOpinion
The New Republic on MSNElon Musk Wants to Use His Chaotic Emails to Track Federal WorkersDonald Trump claimed that the email was somehow intended to catch out nonexistent government employees—but the true purpose has emerged: to see how closely federal agencies are following the president’s agenda and sweeping executive orders, even as they face an onslaught of legal challenges.
Elon Musk threatened to fire even more federal workers if they did not respond to his email demanding a list of five tasks completed.
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FOX 5 Washington DC on MSNNOAA layoffs hit Maryland employees, hundreds of jobs lostMass firings at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) are raising alarms among former agency heads and scientists, who warn the cuts could put lives at risk and hurt the U.S. economy.
Hundreds of weather forecasters and other federal National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration employees on probationary status were fired
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.
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