DOGE Guts National Weather Service: 30 Offices Lose Lead Meteorologists Ahead of Hurricane Season
DOGE fired over 600 National Weather Service employees including hurricane hunters, meteorologists, and storm modelers, leaving 30 forecast offices without lead meteorologists. The NWS Goodland, Kansas office became the first to abandon 24/7 operations. Five former NWS directors warned the cuts endanger lives heading into tornado and hurricane season.
DOGE cuts eliminated over 600 National Weather Service employees, leaving 30 of 122 forecast offices without a lead meteorologist. The Goodland, Kansas office became the first to stop 24/7 operations. Five former NWS directors warned the cuts 'may endanger lives.' The gutting came just before the busiest severe weather season.
Executive summary
What this record documents
- On February 27, 2025, the Commerce Department and NOAA fired more than 600 probationary employees at the National Weather Service, including hurricane hunters, meteorologists, and storm modelers.
- By May 2025, 30 of the NWS's 122 forecast offices lacked a lead meteorologist. Goodland, Kansas — normally staffed with 13 meteorologists — was down to 5 and became the first NWS office to stop 24/7 operations.
- At least 8 NWS offices reduced hours or planned to, leaving gaps in overnight severe weather monitoring during the peak tornado and thunderstorm season.
- Five former NWS directors issued a joint letter warning that the cuts 'leave the nation's official weather forecasting entity at a significant deficit, just as we head into the busiest time for severe storm predictions like tornadoes and hurricanes' and 'may endanger lives.'
- Congressional Democrats formally questioned the NWS about staffing shortages caused by DOGE, citing the threat to public safety.
Timeline
Sequence of events
January 20, 2025
Federal hiring freeze imposed
The Trump administration imposes a government-wide hiring freeze on Day 1, preventing the NWS from filling existing vacancies. Combined with normal attrition, this begins degrading forecast office staffing levels.
February 27, 2025
DOGE fires 600+ NWS employees
The Commerce Department and NOAA fire more than 600 probationary NWS employees as part of DOGE's government-wide workforce reduction. Those terminated include hurricane hunters, meteorologists, storm modelers, hydrologists, and radar technicians.
May 2, 2025
30 forecast offices lack lead meteorologists
CNN reports that 30 of the NWS's 122 forecast offices now lack a lead meteorologist. Goodland, Kansas and Hanford, California are identified as the two most understaffed offices in the nation.
May 24, 2025
Five former NWS directors warn cuts 'may endanger lives'
Five former directors of the National Weather Service issue a joint letter warning that the staffing cuts leave the nation dangerously unprepared heading into hurricane season and the peak period for tornado predictions.
May 28, 2025
Goodland, Kansas stops 24/7 operations
The NWS Goodland office, down from 13 to 5 meteorologists, becomes the first NWS forecast office to stop operating 24/7. The office closes from 11 PM to 6 AM, with surrounding offices monitoring the area during those hours. About a dozen more offices are expected to follow.
June 1, 2025
Kansas Reflector reports on public safety implications
The Kansas Reflector publishes an investigation into the Goodland closure, noting that western Kansas is part of Tornado Alley and that the overnight hours when the office is now closed are precisely when nighttime tornadoes — the deadliest kind — typically strike.
August 5, 2025
Administration authorizes rehiring 450 NWS positions
After months of degraded forecasting through peak severe weather season, NOAA receives permission to fill up to 450 positions at the NWS, including meteorologists, hydrologists, and radar technicians. The move is widely seen as an acknowledgment that the DOGE cuts went too far.
December 6, 2025
Winter storm season begins with offices still understaffed
The Spokesman-Review reports that as winter arrives, not all weather offices are ready. Despite the authorized rehiring, many positions remain unfilled, and institutional knowledge lost during the mass firings cannot be quickly replaced.
Analysis
Reporting, legal context, and impact
What Happened
On February 27, 2025, the Commerce Department and NOAA fired more than 600 National Weather Service employees as part of DOGE's government-wide workforce reduction. The fired workers included hurricane hunters, meteorologists, storm modelers, hydrologists, and radar technicians — the people who warn Americans about tornadoes, hurricanes, floods, and blizzards.
The impact was immediate and measurable. By May 2025, 30 of the NWS's 122 forecast offices lacked a lead meteorologist. The Goodland, Kansas office — which normally has 13 meteorologists — was down to just 5, tying with Hanford, California as the most understaffed in the nation.
Goodland: The First Office to Go Dark
In late May 2025, the NWS Goodland office became the first forecast office in the country to stop operating 24/7. From 11 PM to 6 AM, the office shut down, with surrounding offices monitoring the area remotely during those hours. About a dozen more offices were expected to follow.
The timing could not have been worse. Western Kansas is squarely in Tornado Alley, and the overnight hours when the Goodland office goes dark are precisely when nighttime tornadoes — statistically the deadliest kind because people are asleep — typically strike. The Kansas Reflector reported on the public safety implications in detail.
Five Former Directors Sound the Alarm
In May 2025, five former directors of the National Weather Service issued an extraordinary joint letter warning that the cuts "leave the nation's official weather forecasting entity at a significant deficit, just as we head into the busiest time for severe storm predictions like tornadoes and hurricanes." They stated plainly that the cuts "may endanger lives."
This represented the most authoritative possible assessment of the damage. These five individuals collectively had decades of experience running the very agency that was being gutted.
The Implicit Admission
In August 2025, the Trump administration authorized NOAA to rehire up to 450 NWS positions. This was an implicit acknowledgment that the DOGE cuts had gone too far — but it came after months of degraded forecasting capability through the peak severe weather season. And as the Spokesman-Review reported in December 2025, many positions remained unfilled heading into winter, because institutional knowledge cannot be rehired on a timeline.
Why This Is Classified Severe
This incident receives a severe classification because:
- Direct threat to life: Weather forecasting is not bureaucracy — it is the system that warns people to take shelter before a tornado hits their home. Degrading this system during severe weather season directly endangers lives.
- Scale: 600+ employees fired, 30 of 122 offices without lead meteorologists, at least 8 offices with reduced hours.
- Timing: The cuts were made in February and March, just before the peak severe weather season (April-June for tornadoes, June-November for hurricanes).
- Indiscriminate: DOGE applied the same mass-termination template to the NWS that it applied to every agency, without distinguishing between administrative positions and the meteorologists who physically issue tornado warnings.
- Expert consensus: Five former NWS directors — the most authoritative voices possible — warned the cuts endanger lives.
The Public Safety Gap
The National Weather Service exists because weather kills people. Tornadoes, hurricanes, floods, blizzards, and extreme heat events collectively kill hundreds of Americans each year, and timely warnings are the single most effective intervention. Every minute of earlier warning saves lives.
When a forecast office stops operating 24/7, or when an office lacks the staff to issue timely warnings, the gap is measured in human lives. The NWS's mission statement is to "protect life and property." DOGE treated its workforce as interchangeable bureaucrats.
Linked reporting
Reporting and secondary sources
- Ahead of hurricane season, the National Weather Service is reeling from DOGE's cuts NPR
- DOGE cuts at NOAA will impact hurricane forecasting and data gathering on storms NPR
- No 24-hour National Weather Service in Goodland, Kansas? We'll all pay, one way or another. Kansas Reflector
- Democrats question NWS about staffing shortages caused by DOGE Washington Examiner
- How politics is weakening America's weather service Brookings Institution
- National Weather Service is now hiring back hundreds of positions that got cut in the DOGE chaos CNN
- After deep DOGE cuts, National Weather Service gets OK to fill up to 450 jobs Federal News Network
- The Lasting Threat of Trump's Cuts to NOAA and NWS on American Communities Center for American Progress
- Winter is coming. Not all weather offices are ready. The Spokesman-Review
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