Texas Officials Slam Trump’s National Weather Service for Bad Forecast; The government weather forecaster has been hit with huge cuts by the president’s administration.
BLAME GAME
The government weather forecaster has been hit with huge cuts by the president’s administration.
PIROSCHKA VAN DE WOUW / POOL/AFP via Getty Images
Officials in Texas are casting blame on the National Weather Service (NWS) for failing to forecast catastrophic flooding that has killed 24 people.
NWS was among the government agencies targeted by the Trump administration in its effort to gut the federal bureaucracy,
losing approximately 600 staffers.
After the cuts, the agency—which was already understaffed—began to prepare to offer “degraded” forecasting services, facing “severe shortages” of meteorologists,
according to an internal document obtained by
The New York Times in April.
“The original forecast that we received Wednesday from the National Weather Service predicted 3-6 inches of rain in the Concho Valley and 4-8 inches in the Hill Country,”
said Texas Emergency Management Chief W. Nim Kidd at a press conference Friday. “The amount of rain that fell at this specific location was never in any of those forecasts.”
Flooding along the Guadalupe River in Texas has killed 18 adults and nine children. About 25 young girls from Camp Mystic, a Christian summer camp that sits near the river, are still missing. / ABC Affiliate KSAT via Reuters
Sudden thunderstorms
dumped more than 10 inches of rain on the area, causing heavy flooding from the Guadalupe River.
Dalton Rice, the city manager for Kerrville, Texas—who also spoke at the press conference—said that the catastrophic flash flooding happened because the skies “dumped more rain than what was forecasted” on two of the river’s forks.
The flooding
has killed at least 27 people so far—18 adults and nine children. About 25 young girls from Camp Mystic, a Christian summer camp that sits near the river, are still missing.
Speaking to reporters on Air Force One Friday, Trump
called the catastrophe “shocking” and “terrible.”
President Donald Trump called the catastrophe “shocking” and “terrible
“They don’t know the answer yet as to how many people, but it looks like some young people have died,” he said.
The
Times reported in June that, just months after the Trump administration had forced out the hundreds of staffers, the National Weather Service was granted a waiver to the administration’s government-wide hiring freeze.
A spokesperson told the
Times that the added staff were intended to “stabilize” the agency.
The National Weather Service did not immediately return the Daily Beast’s request for comment.