What A Day - Ex-NOAA Administrator On Trump's Staffing Cuts
Episode Date: July 11, 2025President Donald Trump is scheduled to travel to central Texas today to tour damage of the devastating July 4th weekend floods. More than 100 people have been confirmed dead, and nearly 200 are still ...missing a week later. As people in the region continue to mourn their loved ones and assess the destruction, there has been a lot of finger-pointing over whether more could have been done to alert people about the flood risks. If staffing cuts at the National Weather Service played a role, and who’s to blame for the mounting death toll? Richard Spinrad, the former administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, talks about how staffing cuts make the agency’s job harder.And in headlines: A federal judge in New Hampshire blocked the Trump Administration’s order ending birthright citizenship after a class-action challenge, retiring Republican North Carolina Sen. Thom Tills unloads during a CNN exclusive interview, and former Columbia grad student Mahmoud Khalil filed a claim against the Trump administration for $20 million in damages.Show Notes:Call Congress – 202-224-3121Subscribe to the What A Day Newsletter – https://tinyurl.com/3kk4nyz8What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Friday, July 11th, I'm Jane Coaston, and this is What A Day, the show wishing Department
of Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy the best as he takes on also being the interim
administrator of NASA.
Of course, he's no Marco Rubio, who is Secretary of State, supposed acting administrator of
the U.S. Agency for International Development, acting archivist for the National Archives,
interim national security advisor, and also should really finish picking up my dry cleaning.
On today's show, a federal judge in New Hampshire blocked President Donald Trump's efforts to end birthright citizenship after a class action challenge.
And retiring Republican North Carolina Senator Tom Tillis unloads during a CNN exclusive interview.
But let's start with the massive floods in central Texas that have
so far killed at least 120 people.
President Trump is scheduled to arrive today to offer thoughts and
prayers and hopefully not reflexively sort of blame the flood damage on
former president Joe Biden again.
But I'm not counting on it because we've gotten to my least favorite
part of any horrible disaster, the blame game.
And honestly, with some good reason.
From the National Weather Service to the Federal Emergency Management Agency, many of the institutions
tasked with every step of disaster mitigation have faced massive staffing cuts under the
Trump administration.
So sorry, Texas Governor Greg Abbott, but using a football metaphor isn't really
going to help you here.
Who's to blame?
Know this.
That's the word choice of losers.
Let me explain one thing about Texas.
And that is Texas, every square inch of our state cares about football.
You could be in Hunt, Texas, Huntsville, Texas,
Houston, Texas, any size community
that care about football.
High school, Friday night lights,
college football, or pro.
And know this, every football team makes mistakes.
The losing teams are the ones that try to point out
who's to blame.
The championship teams are the ones that say,
don't worry about it, man, we got this." Don't worry about it? More than 100 people don't die
after a football game. People's kids, spouses, grandparents, and friends don't die after a
football game. And nearly 200 people are still missing in Kerr County alone, which experienced
the brunt of the floods over the 4th of July weekend. Texans care about them, too.
The stories of those who died in the flooding are truly horrifying.
At Camp Mystic, a camp for girls located alongside the Guadalupe River, the floodwaters rose
26 feet in just 40 minutes overnight, sweeping away entire cabins and killing more than two
dozen children, camp staff, and the director of the camp.
He died trying to rescue campers.
So what did happen?
What role did massive staffing cuts play or not play in preventing folks in Texas
from getting out of harm's way?
To find out, I spoke to Richard Spinrad.
He's the former administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
which includes the National Weather Service.
Administrator Spinrad, welcome to Whataday.
Thanks for having me.
Glad to be here.
There's been a lot of finger pointing about what systems broke down to notify those in
Texas about the devastating flash floods that hit over the 4th of July weekend.
But to start off, what are the biggest challenges weather scientists face when it comes to predicting
the potential danger of any given storm, given our climate is changing, and then conveying that danger down the chain to people in the storm's path.
Like what are the challenges when everything's working perfectly?
I would say the two challenges are resolution and probability.
And what I mean by that is the resolution, you're not going to get a forecast that says,
here's what's going to happen in your backyard.
It will tell you that you're going to have a flash flood in this river.
The forecast will tell you that you can expect line winds.
The forecast for bigger events may tell you you're going to get a hurricane,
and it's expected to hit within 20 miles of this spot on the coast.
So that resolution issue is a real challenge for forecasters, but we're getting better
and better and better.
The probability issue is probably the tougher one from the standpoint of, if you will, social
sciences and behavioral sciences.
In the same way that we don't say it's going to rain at 437,
what we'll say is there is an 80% chance of rain at 430 or so.
How do you, as the public or a safety officer or a traffic control person,
determine what to do based on a probabilistic forecast, 80% chance of
flooding. And that's where there's a lot of coordination between the weather service and
the emergency management community. And in fact, the weather forecast offices around
the country have a position called warning coordination meteorologist whose job it
is to interpret hey what does 90% chance or 60% chance of a flash flood in an
hour really mean for emergency management. So looking at the Texas
flood specifically local officials in Texas are pointing fingers at the
National Weather Service saying that the Weather Service didn't accurately
predict the severity of the storm. You ran the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration which oversees the Weather Service. What's your take on what
happened here? I'd start by saying a flash flood warning is a flash flood
warning and at 1 14 in the morning of Friday July 4th the Weather Service
issued a flash flood warning.
And I would point out they used words like considerable and catastrophic impact.
The fact that the earlier forecast predicted something like eight inches of rain
and there was more like 12 indicates we still have work to do on the forecast.
But nevertheless, the eight inches of rain forecast
was enough to trigger a flash flood warning. So saying, well, gee, you know, you didn't
get the exact amount of rainfall right, I believe is not necessarily relevant since
the warning did go out. And had people received and been able to act on the warning, perhaps we wouldn't
have seen the kind of death and devastation that we did in this case.
Democrats are also pointing to staffing shortages brought by the Trump administration in the
last few months.
You have said that this also played a role.
Why do you think that that's the more likely culprit?
And if you could draw a line between staffing shortages and a lack of preparedness.
It's probably too soon to give a definitive analysis and there will be a lot of assessments
done by the state, by the emergency managers.
Weather service will guarantee doing an assessment on this.
But because of staffing cuts, the fellow who was serving as the warning coordination meteorologist
in the San Antonio weather forecast office, which is the office that issued this flash flood
warning at 1 14 in the morning, retired at the end of April. And that position was vacant
on Friday, July 4th. The way that position works is that when the warning goes out, it's not
sufficient. If I send you an email, Jane, I can't assume you got it. And that's the
problem. The warning goes out, how do you know they got it? And so the warning
coordination meteorologist's job is to make sure they got it and to be on the
line, be there to receive the questions from emergency managers.
I have heard in the media that some emergency managers got the warning at 1 o'clock, 1
14 in the morning. Some did not. We're going to have to find out why that happened. But
it's clear to me that staff cuts had to have been a contributing factor to the inability
of the emergency managers to respond.
Going to your point, the Washington Post reported that since January around 2,000 NOAA scientists
and meteorologists have left the agency, either through firings, buyouts, or to your point,
retirements. And the Supreme Court just gave the Trump administration the green light to lay off
tens of thousands more federal workers across the government. But we're also about to head into
hurricane season
along the East Coast, fire season along the West Coast.
We've seen multiple instances of flash flooding
just in the last week in Texas,
North Carolina, and New Mexico.
So what risks do you see on the horizon?
This is the real confounding issue
and one that is keeping a lot of people up
is that these hazards don't happen one after the next.
A lot of times they're happening at the same time.
So yeah, you're right.
And one of the interesting things is part of the reason the San Antonio and San
Angelo weather forecast offices in Texas were able to do so well in getting a
forecast out is that they surged staff to those offices to make up for some of
the shortfalls in staffing in those offices. You
can't do that. You end up playing musical chairs with staffing if you're trying to deal with
hurricanes, floods, droughts, fires, heat waves. The answer, obviously, is to hire into those
positions. Now, there has been some move afoot in the last couple of weeks to allow positions that
are being identified as critical to be filled. And I think the Weather Service is going to be filling a hundred
or so of those jobs. But that doesn't happen overnight either in the federal government.
So we're going to see, I would say several months of continued short staffing. My concern
is that what we saw in Texas is just the start. And we're going to see hazards throughout the year. Will we have the same consequences as we did in
Texas? Speaking on that point, President Trump's pick to lead Noah, Neil Jacobs,
had a Senate hearing Wednesday. He held the role during Trump's first term in an
acting capacity and he told senators during his hearing that filling some of
those empty staffing positions at the Weather Service would be a top priority
for him. But he also defended the administration's cuts to weather and climate research. What
are the problems with that?
Hey, I don't know how you do that. The president's budget cuts NOAA, which is nominally a $7
billion agency, by a couple billion dollars. And Neil testified that he wanted to do a
lot of things. He wanted to hire more people. He wanted to build more capacity for artificial intelligence, cloud computing. Okay, all of those are good. What
are you going to take off the table? What are you not going to do in order to do those
things? Now, I will point out that the weather service component of the president's budget
does not suffer the same degree of reduction as the rest of the agency.
But it certainly isn't showing the kind of growth that's needed to build everything that
I heard they was talking about building.
A buzzword that keeps coming up that makes me very anxious related to the Weather Service
is privatization.
We've seen reports that some of Trump's appointees would benefit if government weather
forecasting were privatized.
And I've been hearing arguments about privatizing the Weather Service for a long time.
What's your read?
How worried are you that this could happen?
So privatization to a certain extent is already happening.
The Weather Service and the commercial weather enterprise.
When I say commercial weather enterprise, I mean AccuWeather, the Weather Channel, Windy, all of those private weather services take advantage of the weather service
products and then add additional services that you can buy, you can pay for. That works
reasonably well. But now let's talk about what seems to be on some people's minds, and
that is a much more expanded private weather service responsibility perhaps even at the expense of the public national weather
service. Well the first thing is the weather service is a capital intensive
effort. At NOAA we operated 16 satellites 15 15 ships, 9 aircraft. Think about the hurricane
hunters. Those are assets that the government owns and operates that
contribute to weather forecasts. Are we really saying the private sector is
ready for that kind of capital expense? I have not heard them say that. The other
is the liability. Are the private sector, is the private sector really ready to take on the liability of the consequences of a blown forecast or even a
forecast that's not quite right? That's an expensive undertaking and private sector is
not going to be indemnified for consequences and damages as a result of a bad forecast.
The final issue and probably the most insidious
with respect to privatization,
is that it's highly regressive.
So think right now about something like a streaming service.
You may decide to subscribe for one.
I may choose not to because I can't afford it.
That's basically what a privatized weather service would be.
It would be weather forecast for those who can afford it.
And that's just not the way it should be done.
Weather forecasting, in my opinion,
is an inherently governmental function
and should be provided by taxpayer dollars.
Administrator Spenrad, thank you so much for joining me.
It's been my pleasure.
Thank you for having me.
That was my conversation with Richard Spenad, former administrator of the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration.
We'll get to more of the news in a moment, but if you like the show, make sure to subscribe,
leave a five-star review on Apple Podcasts, and share with your friends.
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Here's what else we're following today.
Headlines. I'm initiating a process to seek accountability from the Trump administration for false imprisonment,
for warrantless arrest, for emotional distress, all of these things that I have to go through
for over 100 days.
Weeks after his release from federal immigration detention in Louisiana, Mahmoud Khalil is
filing a claim against the Trump administration for what he calls his abduction.
Khalil was detained by immigration officials in March for his role in pro-Palestinian protests
at Columbia University last year.
He was not charged with a crime during his detention, which was for
more than 100 days. His case is ongoing in immigration court. On Thursday, Halil's lawyers
filed a claim for $20 million in damages. They allege false imprisonment, malicious prosecution,
and abusive process, among other things. The Department of Homeland Security,
Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and the State Department are named in the filing.
Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and the State Department are named in the filing.
Tricia McLaughlin, a spokesperson for DHS, said in an emailed statement to the Associated
Press that Khalil's claim is, quote, absurd.
In a recent interview with the AP, Khalil recounted missing the birth of his son, Dean,
while in detention. The pain of that night when I was on the phone 1,400 miles away from my wife,
the government had actually used this to punish me, used this moment to punish me, use this moment to punish me, not to allow me to be present with my
wife during this moment. And this is something I will never forgive."
However, he did say that he would accept an apology and changes to the Trump
administration's deportation policies instead of the 20 million dollar
settlement. Not only for what the administration did to him, but also for
what it has done to others.
Khalil says unless the administration is held accountable, its power will continue to go unchecked.
Project Hope, a DC-based aid organization's clinic in central Gaza, was struck by an Israeli missile Thursday morning. The strike killed more than a dozen people waiting for aid outside of
the clinic, which was not yet open. According to Project HOPE, most of the victims were women and children.
By mid-morning, an additional 30 people,
19 of those children, had been reported injured.
Chessa Latifi works for the organization
and spoke with What A Day newsletter writer,
Matt Berg, on Thursday.
Those parents brought them in to see
if they could get them some sort of support, right?
And if they weren't there because they were starving,
they were probably there for an upper respiratory illness
or some kind of gastrointestinal problem
or maybe a chronic issue.
So like, who were these people?
They were parents just like anywhere across the world
trying to get healthcare for their kids in a really
terrible environment.
The Israel Defense Forces claim that the intended target of their missile was a Hamas operative who
was involved in the October 7th, 2023 attack on Israel.
They said they regretted, quote, any harm to uninvolved individuals.
The news from Gaza comes after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
spent days meeting with the Trump administration and members of Congress.
So far, neither Israel nor Hamas have announced major progress towards a
ceasefire in the Middle East.
On Thursday, a federal judge in New Hampshire blocked President Trump's
executive order ending birthright citizenship from going into effect
nationwide.
The decision stems from a class action lawsuit brought by the ACLU and other
immigrants rights groups on behalf of three non-citizen parents and their
children. The group filed its suit just hours after the United States Supreme
Court issued a decision limiting the ability of lower courts to issue
nationwide injunctions against executive orders last month.
The justices said lawyers had to file class action suits to achieve the same
effect. We're confused too.
But the justices did not address the constitutionality of ending birthright
citizenship itself.
Trump's executive order sought to deny automatic citizenship to future children
of undocumented immigrants and those with temporary legal status.
Judge Joseph LaPlante issued a seven day stay on the ruling to allow for appeals.
Judge Joseph LaPlante issued a seven-day stay on the ruling to allow for appeals. Now, with the passing of Tom, I think it's clear he's out of his depth as a
manager of a large complex organization. That's retiring North Carolina
Republican Senator Tom Tillis talking about how Secretary of Defense Pete
Hegseth doesn't have the management chops for his current gig. You know, the gig
Tillis voted in favor of Hegseth Getting back in January.
The comment came during an interview with CNN's Jake Tapper that aired Wednesday.
The Senator also told Tapper that he would not support any future nominees of President
Trump's who do not condemn the January 6, 2021 attacks on the U.S. Capitol.
But the January 6 fanboys and girls appointed before you announced your retirement?
Cool and fine.
Tillis was one of three Republicans in the Senate who voted against
President Trump's big, beautiful bill, in part because of its proposed cuts to
Medicaid. Here he is on the Senate floor before the passage of the bill.
So what do I tell 663,000 people in two years or three years when President
Trump breaks his promise by pushing them off of Medicaid.
Trump retaliated by threatening to support challengers to Tillis in the 2026 Senate primary.
And just one day later, Tillis announced that he wouldn't be seeking re-election after this term.
Another day, another powerful demonstration in Washington that you should only wait to be brave
until it is in your own self-interest. And that's the news.
Before we go, Peter Thiel says God is dead, but New York Times columnist Ross Douthat
says maybe religion isn't the problem.
He joins Offline to explain why the belief in God is a rational choice and to dissect
what the rights turned against Christianity says about power, politics, and the soul of
Silicon Valley.
Tune into this week's episode of Offline on YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts.
That's all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review, shout out to the 31 workers
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And if you're into reading, and not just about how I have a deep, deep fear of being
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Like me.
What a day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at Crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Jane Coaston.
And a spokesperson for the LA County Sanitation District said the workers were quote, shaken
up by what happened.
I'm shaken up sitting here telling you about it.
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