Federal workers with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration rallied in Seattle to protest President Trump's expected cuts to the agency.
The agency is working “as quickly as possible” to update charts and weather products to reflect Trump’s order to use Gulf of America.
Federal workers at the home agency for the National Weather Service are concerned about a potential overhaul by Trump officials focused on cutting government costs.
Taylor Jordan would join the agency at a time when its workforce has been targeted for sharp reductions in staff.
Slashing federal funding for scientific research will have catastrophic and long-lasting impacts far beyond the laboratories where government research funds are spent.
At the moment, though, it is science itself that is being shaped. Mere weeks into the second Trump administration, scientists worry that their flagship institutions are under assault. The National Scientific Foundation ( NSF) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration ( NOAA ),
The National Weather Service's maps, charts, websites and other weather products will "as quickly as possible" bear the name Gulf of America.
NOAA includes offices that study the ocean and atmosphere, forecast the weather at the National Weather Service and manage the country's oceanic fisheries. Where t
The stop-work order affects staff members of the U.S. Global Change Research Program and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration who engage with a key working group of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
Canadian climate and fisheries experts are reeling after the Trump administration ordered researchers with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)—the US government agency in charge of weather forecasting,
The move could complicate forecasts NOAA provides for hurricanes that affect Mexico and other countries outside U.S. territory that don't recognize the new name. Zoom in: The name change, first reported by Bloomberg,
The Senate has confirmed another one of President Donald Trump’s Cabinet nominees with power over energy, environment and climate policy. Senators voted 51-45 for businessman Howard Lutnick to lead the Department of Commerce — including NOAA,