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Schumer requests probe into NWS staffing and flood response
- NWS defends its forecasting amid criticism from Texas officials
- Trump denies federal cuts affected NWS disaster response
- DOGE initiative led to early retirements at NWS
- NWS San Antonio office faced staffing vacancies during flood
WASHINGTON, July 7 (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate’s top Democrat on Monday asked a government watchdog to investigate whether cuts at the National Weather Service affected the forecasting agency’s response to catastrophic and deadly flooding in Central Texas.
Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer asked the Department of Commerce’s acting inspector general Monday to probe whether staffing vacancies at the NWS’s San Antonio office contributed to “delays, gaps, or diminished accuracy” in forecasting the flooding. He asked the watchdog to scrutinize the office’s communications with Kerr County officials.
The NWS did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Schumer’s letter. It defended its forecasting and emergency management before, during and after the flood, in a statement Sunday.
A top three leadership role at the NWS’s San Antonio office has been vacant since earlier this year after Paul Yura, the U.S. forecasting agency’s warning coordination meteorologist for San Antonio, accepted an offer from the Trump administration to retire.
Lol doesn’t matter what he wants: no one is going to approve it.