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NOAA was developing a way to predict extreme rainfall — until Trump officials stopped it

Hey, Jeff, not sure if this helps, but here is an excerpt from the article naming the program being cut. Not sure if the program you mentioned falls under this or not:

The tool is part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Atlas 15 project — a massive dataset that will show how often storms of a given duration and intensity could be expected to occur at locations across the United States. The project was intended to be published in two volumes: one that would assess communities’ current risks and a second that would project how those risks will change under future climate scenarios.
 
Oh geez...yeah, that's part of PMP.

Currently, extreme rainfall climatology is based on Atlas 14. Atlas 14 is already a really cool tool because you can get point-specific rainfall extreme frequencies from it (PF Map: Contiguous US). Atlas 14 has numerous shortcomings, however, which renders its values dubious in some areas and for some precip lengths. Atlas 15 was supposed to be a huge improvement. I sure hope Atlas 15 isn't cut...that will be a huge disservice to forecasting extreme and hazardous rainfall.
 
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