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Monday, 10 March 2025

Your weather app could miss the next big storm. Blame DOGE

 

Your weather app could miss the next big storm. Blame DOGE.

Legendary TV meteorologist Tom Skilling says targeting the National Weather Service puts us all in jeopardy.

By Jennifer Schulze

There’s a saying in Chicago: If you don’t like the weather, wait a few minutes. So, like many Chicagoans, first thing every morning, I check the weather app on my phone. It will tell me if Chicago is an unseasonably warm 45 degrees heading to 60 with a hint of sunshine or if the light rain will stop in 20 minutes. But It’s not always so pleasant here in the Midwest. Sometimes it is dangerous, even deadly.

In 2024, thanks to data collected and analyzed by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the National Weather Service, my weather app warned me about excessive heat, flash floods, dense fog, high winds, extreme cold, small craft advisories on Lake Michigan and tornadoes—a lot of them. Illinois set a record for tornadoes last year: 63, including 32 in just one night in July.

Now, with tornado season looming, our access to valuable weather information is under threat. The U.S. government‘s stellar weather information service is being torn apart and likely sold for parts as Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency implement another destructive chapter of the Project 2025 playbook: experienced scientists fired, senior meteorologists forced into retirement, broken radars left unrepairedweather forecasting balloons not launched, and leases for vital forecasting units canceled. The loss of expertise is profound, and the impact will be widespread. We’ll all be less safe, the economy will suffer and, yes, those popular weather apps could miss the next big storm.

We are already seeing the impact. In California this past weekend, NWS offices struggled with staff shortages. Two weather radars broke, and repairs for the mission-critical equipment are on hold. In San Diego, that meant the weather apps failed to note a coming rainstorm. In the San Francisco Bay Area, not only was the main radar down, but the back-up system also failed. The accuracy of the weather forecast there was also in doubt.

Here in Chicago, one person is synonymous with weather: revered TV meteorologist Tom Skilling.

“I'm inclined, based on my decades of work with the National Weather Service, to invoke the old adage, ‘If it ain't broke, then don't try and fix it’,” the weather legend said.

For 45 years, Skilling did remarkably comprehensive, unusually long weather forecasts grounded in science and delivered with enthusiasm. His segments were must-watch TV across the country via WGN-TV’s extensive national cable audience. Skilling’s expertise guided Chicago through devastating weather events over the years, including the 1995 heat wave that killed more than 700 people. For all of it, he says he relied on data and analysis from his highly respected peers at the National Weather Service.

“Our city has been brought to a standstill by blizzards, been ravaged by tornadoes and flooding and ... residents have experienced the coldest and very nearly hottest weather ever recorded—and all that in our lifetimes,” Skilling said. “Weather here matters.”

Tom Skilling delivering one of his comprehensive weathercasts on WGN-TV on Feb. 28, 2024. (Photo courtesy of Tom Skilling.)

Now Skilling is gravely concerned that Chicago-and the rest of the country—might be at risk because of the DOGE cutbacks. Skilling told me: “I'm concerned—and I think others should be as well--about the dismantling or, at minimum, degradation of our National Weather Service given the public safety and scientific research functions at the heart of its mission.”

He added: “There's the erroneous notion afoot in some circles that these are bloated agencies—inappropriately flooded with public funds. This doesn't conform with anything I've seen over my more than half century of meteorological work. The truth is, I've marveled over the years at the efficiency with which the National Weather Service and NOAA have done what they're charged with doing. Truth is, there have actually been a number of reviews of the Weather Service which have suggested the agency is underfunded given all they do for the American public.”

I worked with Skilling at WGN, so I know firsthand how serious he is about weather forecasting and how much he respects the scientists and the government agencies that underpin it. Skilling says the NWS is the very best in the world and he'd tell that to Elon Musk if he could. He’d also counsel Musk and his team to avoid closing any of the 122 regional forecasting offices like the one we have here in suburban Chicago that keep an eye out for tornadoes and other bad weather.

“When local Weather Service meteorologists spot a tornado and project its potential path, they know where schools, hospitals and other weather vulnerable structures and populations are located—critical to assess risk. Local offices provide absolutely critical ‘ground truth’—a description of what's going on in rapidly developing severe weather situations when tornadoes are hopscotching across the area with sometimes devastating impacts—through their connection with local municipalities, spotters and other sources.”

Chicago has had a weather reporting office of sorts since the late 1800s, when President Ulysses S. Grant approved the “Army Signal Service” to help prevent shipwrecks on Lake Michigan. One year later, the weather observation office burned to the ground in the Great Chicago Fire. It took just six days to reopen it in a rented office in part of the city spared by the blaze.

Now, more than 150 years later, that local office is part of a nationwide weather operation that is on the job 24/7.

“Every piece of meteorological information you see or hear on television and radio, that you view on your iPhone has originated with our remarkable National Weather Service,” Skilling said. “Every satellite or radar image, seven or 10-day forecast, every tornado warning or winter storm watch has its origin with our National Weather Service.”

The NWS weather information is also free and available to all. It’s a public good, much like the U.S. Postal Service, that should not be privatized and sold to the highest bidder, as outlined in Project 2025. Skilling agrees. “It's hard to imagine any private entity operating a satellite system, supercomputers, mammoth communication system, all the weather observations, and all the buoys that are needed,” he said.

The National Weather Service is a government success story. As Skilling told me, “The weather never stops—nor do my National Weather Service colleagues.” For about $4 a year, we get the best scientists in the world watching a staggering number of weather events each year. Tens of thousands of thunderstorms, 5,000 floods, 1,300 tornadoes, hurricanes, droughts and an increasing number of wildfires. Their work makes it safe to fly. Their work informs farmers when to plant and harvest. Their work determines when to sound tornado alarms and when to evacuate from the path of a hurricane. That all adds up to more than 3 billion weather forecasts a year. Now, as the tornado season starts and the hurricane season near, none of that seems to matter to the ideologues in charge. But it certainly should.

Jennifer Schulze is a longtime Chicago journalist. She’s on Bluesky @newsjennifer.bsky.social and Substack at “Indistinct Chatter.”


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Sunday, 9 March 2025

Ben Ainslie wins Battle of Britain

 

Since the Royal Yacht Squadron was announced as the Challenger of Record for the 38th America’s Cup, the British team which represented the club for the past three editions had imploded. With skipper Sir Ben Ainslie and team sponsor Sir Jim Ratcliffe both now asserting separate entry into the next event, what was RYS to do?

That question has been answered with an update to the RYS website now reporting: “Athena Racing represents Royal Yacht Squadron – the British entry for the 38th America’s Cup led by Sir Ben Ainslie.”

Following the break-up with Ratcliffe, under which the team had been named INEOS Britannia, Ainslie noted how his team would be known as Athena Racing going forwards, aligning with the British Women’s and Youth America’s Cup team, the Athena Pathway.

Since the news broke on January 23, there has been little else said from the two protagonists, though Ratcliffe has been battered elsewhere in the news amid a sporting empire that also includes football, rugby, F1, and cycling.


Details: https://www.americascup.com/

Defender New Zealand will work with the Challenger of Record from Great Britain to organize the 38th America’s Cup. Anticipated to be held in 2027, the two teams have agreed on some details with the venue to be confirmed by June 2025 after Barcelona declined hosting another edition.

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Saturday, 8 March 2025

A Good Day in Dumb News

 


A Good Day in Dumb News

by Andrew Egger

Every day is stupid now, but not all stupid days are created equal. Some days are darkly energizing. You want to shout from the rooftops: Look at all the damage these malevolent, clueless jerks are doing! Other days, when the stupidity feels less evil than pointless, are enervating: You’d rather just log off and take a nap. You have to remind yourself: These are actually the good stupid days. You’d rather these than the others.

Yesterday was of the latter category. Markets had been sagging for days over Donald Trump’s inexplicable trade war with Mexico and Canada, and he had plainly been looking for an off-ramp. Mexico was giving him an easy one: President Claudia Sheinbaum had held off on imposing retaliatory tariffs before this weekend and was taking pains not to say anything that would ruffle Trump’s feathers.

Canada, by contrast, was meeting fire with fire—imposing immediate retaliatory tariffs and threatening worse. And Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was punching back hard against Trump’s rhetoric about making Canada the 51st U.S. state.

So on Thursday, when Trump praised Sheinbaum, denounced Trudeau, and announced he was delaying most tariff hikes on Mexico for another month, the moral seemed clear: Even under the most insane circumstances, flattery works. Until a few hours later—when Trump quietly pushed back tariffs on Canada as well.

What did it all mean? Who was it all for? Who knows! Just a few days of pointless value-destroying market chaos, begun at whim, ended at whim. Tune in April 2 and we’ll do the whole thing over again.

Then there was DOGE. Elon Musk’s arson brigade, as we never tire of telling you, has been stepping on rake after rake recently, and Trump finally seemed to decide yesterday that the time had come to yank the chain. During a cabinet meeting this morning—at which Musk was again present—Trump told his agency heads that they, not Musk, had ultimate authority over staffing. Meanwhile, he again signaled that his favor was shifting: “As the Secretaries learn about, and understand, the people working for the various Departments, they can be very precise as to who will remain, and who will go. We say the ‘scalpel’ rather than the ‘hatchet.’” (Or, one assumes, the chainsaw.)

A significant development, it seemed! Until a few hours later—when he undercut it completely in Oval Office remarks to reporters: “Elon and the group are going to be watching them. If they can cut, it’s better. And if they don’t cut, then Elon will do the cutting.”

It’s unlikely, of course, that any of this will hurt Trump with his core constituency: The president is blessed with a deeply credulous base that is perfectly willing to chalk up all flip-flops, swerves, and flailings as the 4D chess moves of a master negotiator.

But the rest of us should take comfort in it, even as we worry that we get actively dumber just reading about it. In some crucial ways, Trump is on a pitch clock: The longer he flounders, the less markets trust him and the less popular he becomes. And the less markets trust him and the less popular he becomes, the more he will stress about how to reverse those trends—which only makes him more indecisive, leading to more whiplash-inducing stories like the ones we saw yesterday. It’s a vicious cycle, the upshot of which is that he gets worse at making America and the world worse in a timely way. It’s a good start.

You know what else is a good start . . . to your day? Joining the Morning Shots community in the comments. Become a Bulwark+ member to gain access.

Friday, 7 March 2025

Trump Signs Executive Order Handing U.S. Public Forests Over to Private Logging Industry

Trump Signs Executive Order Handing U.S. Public Forests Over to Private Logging Industry

A new executive order signed by President Donald Trump over the weekend could have a disastrous effect on endangered speciesclimate change and local economies, warned conservation groups.

The order encouraging the “Immediate Expansion of American Timber Production” seeks to erode Endangered Species Act (ESA) protection rules in favor of the expansion of tree felling across 280 million acres of United States national forests, as well as other public lands, for timber, reported The Guardian.

“This Trump executive order is the most blatant attempt in American history by a president to hand over federal public lands to the logging industry,” said wildfire scientist Chad Hanson with the John Muir Project. “What’s worse, the executive order is built on a lie, as Trump falsely claims that more logging will curb wildfires and protect communities, while the overwhelming weight of evidence shows exactly the opposite.”

The order goes as far as setting an annual target for the amount of timber offered for sale, along with other measures, which could lead to widespread clear-cutting, a press release from Earthjustice said.

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