2hon MSN
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is set to lay off approximately 20% of its workforce, The New York Times ...
UPI News on MSN5d
Coastal economies rely on NOAA, from Maine to Florida, Texas and Alaska—even if they don't realize itHealthy coastal ecosystems play crucial roles in the U.S. economy, from supporting multibillion-dollar fisheries and tourism ...
Former agency employees and leaders believe the mass NOAA layoffs could endanger critical work surrounding weather forecasting, shipping operations, and more.
When combined with the federal hiring freeze, recently terminated staff said the cuts put their organizations on a trajectory ...
Por BRITTANY PETERSON y MATTHEW BROWNLEADVILLE, Colorado, EE.UU. (AP) — Los funcionarios en el oeste de Estados Unidos que ...
Predicting the likelihood of avalanches, potential severity and location depends heavily on info provided by the National ...
19h
The Times-Standard (Eureka) on MSNLori Dengler | NOAA’s tsunami program needs strengthening not budget slashingThe budget reductions have only just begun and are likely to have both intended and unintended consequences. Here’s my take ...
The Associated Press on MSN6d
NOAA firings risk lives and economy, former agency heads warnFormer heads of the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration are warning of the consequences of recent NOAA firings.
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Juneau Empire on MSNNOAA lease, Goldbelt contract among Juneau cuts at DOGE’s websiteThe lease on a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration site in Juneau has been canceled and the Ketchikan Federal Building appeared on a list of “non-core” properties that might be put up for ...
The Trump administration has made drastic cuts to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) that threaten to ...
The website lists nine leases in Alaska that have been canceled as of Sunday, including a NOAA facility in Seward, a Rural House Service operation in Palmer and a U.S. Geological Survey space in ...
Between resignations, firings and paperwork errors, at least 23 of the roughly 200 people in the Weather Service's Alaska offices are no longer with the agency, a union source said.
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