Mike Smith
EF5
Considering he helps run X, Tesla, Space-X and the Boring Company, I'd say he has quite a bit of experience.What qualifications does Musk or anyone at the office he represents have in identifying operational staffing decisions?
CBS news is wrong. The "radar specialists" are El-Techs and they will be rehired Monday if they haven't been already. Same with the meteorologists who man the Hurricane Hunter aircraft. No forecasters were supposed to have been laid off.CBS News quotes a source at the National Weather Service who said that meteorologists were impacted by this week's layoffs, including radar specialists, as well as staff of the Hurricane Hunters crew.
It is no more of an "outrage" than anyone else being laid off by a company that is losing money at an incredible rate and that will go out of business. The U.S. is $38 trillion in debt with the debt growing by $1 trillion every 100 days. It will sink us all if allowed to continue.Speaking as a former government contractor, this is an outrage.
That said, it is a tragedy when someone (public or private sector) loses their job -- especially if it wasn't connected to their personal performance. I personally know a NWS administrative person who was laid off yesterday and she is just sick about it. She has done outstanding work.
Here are the facts from yesterday evening:
As of this afternoon, the Secretary of Commerce just granted a waiver for all NWS employees in job series 1340 (meteorology), 856 (electronics technicians, fixing computers and radars), 2210 (information technology), and 1315 (hydrology). Any MISSION-CRITICAL probationary firing in those series is a mistake and they're working on fixing. Some job series DID NOT get waived, such as 1301 (physical scientist, people who work at HQ, researchers). It is frustrating and sad for them, but they aren't considered "essential" during a lapse in appropriations.
The RIF is probably coming, but again most field offices are excepted (common term usage "essential") and it's less likely we'll be impacted. The more likely issue is the reduction in real estate footprint, so we'll have to see if they have to close some offices down the road.
But in this case, the fearmongering media reports about a 10% cut across NOAA were just plain wrong. And many NWS forecasters fell for it too.