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Home Reality Check

Did US government cuts contribute to the Texas tragedy?

July 8, 2025
in Reality Check
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Ben Chu, Jake Horton, Kayla Epstein & Marco Silva

BBC Verify

BBC A boat on a river in Texas with four rescue workers on boardBBC

In the aftermath of the fatal Texas floods, some Democrats have warned about the “consequences” of the Trump administration’s cuts to the federal government workforce, including meteorologists, with Senator Chris Murphy saying that: “Accurate weather forecasting helps avoid fatal disasters.”

The suggestion is that the cuts may have impeded the ability of the National Weather Service (NWS) – the government agency which provides weather forecasts in the US – to adequately predict the floods and raise the alarm.

But the White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Monday: “These offices [of the NWS] were well staffed… so any claims to the contrary are completely false.”

BBC Verify has examined the impact of cuts under President Trump in this area and while there has been a reduction in the workforce at the NWS, experts who we spoke to said the staffing on hand for the Texas floods appears to have been adequate.

What are the cuts?

The Trump administration has proposed a 25% cut to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) current annual budget of $6.1bn (£4.4bn). NOAA is the agency which oversees the NWS.

This would take effect in the 2026 financial year which begins in October this year – so these particular cuts would not have contributed to the Texas tragedy.

However, the staffing levels of the NWS have already been separately reduced by the Trump administration’s efficiency drive since January.

The Department of Government Efficiency (Doge), previously run by Elon Musk, offered voluntary redundancies, known as buyouts, as well as early retirements to federal government workers. It also ended the contracts of most of those who were on probation.

As a result, about 200 people at the NWS took voluntary redundancy and 300 opted for early retirement, according to Tom Fahy, legislative director of the National Weather Service Employees Organisation union. A further 100 people were ultimately fired from the service, he said.

In total, the NWS lost 600 of its approximately 4,200 staff, says Mr Fahy, causing several offices across the country to operate without the necessary staffing.

In April, the Associated Press news agency said it had seen data compiled by NWS employees showing half of its offices had a vacancy rate of 20% – double the rate a decade earlier.

Despite this, climate experts told BBC Verify that the NWS forecasts and flood warnings last week in Texas were as adequate as could be expected.

“The forecasts and warnings all played out in a normal manner. The challenge with this event was that it is very difficult to forecast this type of extreme, localised rainfall,” says Avantika Gori, an assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering at Rice University in Texas.

And Andy Hazelton, a climate scientist who modelled hurricane paths for the NOAA until he was fired during the layoffs in February, says: “I don’t think the staffing issues contributed directly to this event. They got the watches and the warnings out.”

What about the impact on offices in Texas?

However, some experts have suggested that staffing cuts may have impeded the ability of local NWS offices in Texas to effectively co-ordinate with local emergency services.

“There is a real question as to whether the communication of weather information occurred in a way that was sub-optimal,” says Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at University of California Los Angeles.

“The impact might have been partially averted if some of the people at the weather service responsible for making those communications were still employed – which they were not in some of these local offices,” he adds.

The San Angelo and San Antonio offices, which cover the areas affected by the flooding, reportedly had some existing vacancies.

For example, the San Antonio office’s website lists several positions as being vacant, including two meteorologists.

Getty Images Search and recovery workers dig through debris looking for any survivors or remains of people swept up in the flash flooding at Camp Mystic on July 6, 2025 in Hunt, Texas. Heavy rainfall caused flooding along the Guadalupe River in central Texas with multiple fatalities reported. Getty Images

Rescue efforts are ongoing along the Guadalupe River in central Texas

The NWS union legislative director told BBC Verify that the San Angelo office was missing a senior hydrologist, a scientist who specialises in flooding events.

The San Antonio office also lacked a “warning coordinating meteorologist”, who coordinates communications between local forecasting offices and emergency management services in communities, Mr Fahy said.

However, he noted that both offices had temporarily upped their staffing in anticipation of a dangerous weather event, which is typical in these circumstances.

“The NWS weather forecast offices in Austin/San Antonio and San Angelo, Texas had additional forecasters on duty during the catastrophic flooding event,” NWS spokeswoman Erica Grow Cei said in a statement to BBC Verify. “All forecasts and warnings were issued in a timely manner,” she added.

NWS meteorologist Jason Runyen, who covers the San Antonio area, also said in a statement that where the office would typically have two forecasters on duty during clear weather, they had “up to five on staff”.

When asked on Sunday if government cuts had left key vacancies unfilled at the NWS, President Trump told reporters: “No, they didn’t.”

Were weather balloon launches reduced?

In a video shared thousands of times on social media, US meteorologist John Morales said: “There has been a 20% reduction in weather balloon releases, launches… What we’re starting to see is that the quality of the forecasts is becoming degraded.”

Some social media users have been pointing to Mr Morales’ words as evidence that budget cuts have limited forecasters’ ability to anticipate extreme weather events like the floods in Kerr County, Texas.

Weather balloons are an important tool used by meteorologists to collect weather data – from temperatures, to humidity, pressure, or wind speed – from the upper atmosphere.

In the US, NWS stations would typically launch them twice a day.

In a series of public statements released since February, the NWS confirmed that it either suspended or reduced weather balloon launches in at least 11 locations across the country, which it attributed to a lack of staffing at the local weather forecast offices.

However, there is no evidence to suggest that any of those changes directly affected weather balloon launches in the areas impacted by the floods in Texas.

Publicly available data shows that, in the lead-up to the floods, weather balloon launches were carried out as planned at Del Rio, the launch station nearest to the flood epicentre, collecting data that informed weather forecasts which experts say were as adequate as they could be.

Additional research by Kumar Malhotra

The BBC Verify banner.



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