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NOAA predicts above-average Atlantic hurricane season with as many as 19 named storms

NOAA predicts above-average Atlantic hurricane season with as many as 19 named storms

Yahoo23-05-2025

Hurricane Helene made landfall on Florida's Big Bend on Sept. 26, 2024. Flooding from the storm devastated inland communities across the southeastern United States, killing 251 people, including three Virginians. (Photo courtesy CSU/CIRA & NOAA)
By Ryan Murphy/WHRO
Warm seawater will likely drive another above-average hurricane season this year, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced Thursday.
Forecasters expect between 13 and 19 named tropical storms to form in the Atlantic Ocean between June 1 and November 30.
Six to 10 will become full-blown hurricanes, with three to five eventually becoming major storms.
National Weather Service director Ken Graham said improved forecasting has dramatically cut fatalities from these storms, particularly storm surge projections.
But he warned that things can change quickly and people need to heed warnings and be prepared.
'Every Cat 5 that's hit this country was a tropical storm or less three days prior. The big ones that hit this country are fast,' Graham said Thursday.
Officials said new forecasting methods and technology are being rolled out this year to better anticipate the rapid intensification of storms.
He also noted that his call for preparation isn't just for coastal communities.
'When you live 500 miles inland and you really don't think that you could be impacted like that, right? So it's hard for people to understand what has never happened before,' Graham said.
Virginia to receive $46 million in federal funds for Helene relief efforts
Last year, during another above-average hurricane season, Hurricane Helene dumped 30 inches of rain on communities hundreds of miles from the coast across the Southeastern United States. The storm was the deadliest hurricane to hit the mainland U.S. since Katrina in 2005.
'These storms are a stark reminder about how vital it is to prepare for the upcoming hurricane season now, before the storms begin forming in the Atlantic basin,' said Laura Grimm, NOAA's acting administrator.
Towns in Western Virginia, North Carolina and other states are still recovering from intense flooding and Graham said they're exploring better ways to notify people of the threats.
The warnings come as the National Weather Service has faced staffing and budget cuts, measures that some worry could hamper weather monitoring efforts.
Grimm said during Thursday's announcement that NOAA's Hurricane Center is fully staffed and the cuts won't impede monitoring.
'We are really making this a top priority for this administration.'
This story was originally published by the Mercury's media partner WHRO Public Media, the Hampton Roads region's largest media company.
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Turmoil, worry swirl over cuts to key federal agencies as hurricane season begins
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Turmoil, worry swirl over cuts to key federal agencies as hurricane season begins

WASHINGTON (AP) — With predictions for a busy hurricane season beginning Sunday, experts in storms and disasters are worried about something potentially as chaotic as the swirling winds: Massive cuts to the federal system that forecasts, tracks and responds to hurricanes. Experts are alarmed over the large-scale staff reductions, travel and training restrictions and grant cut-offs since President Donald Trump took office at both the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which prepares for and responds to hurricanes, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which tracks and forecasts them. 'My nightmare is a major catastrophic storm hitting an area that is reeling from the impact of all of this nonsense from the Trump administration and people will die. And that could happen in Florida, that could happen in Texas, that could happen in South Carolina,' said Susan Cutter, the director of the Hazards and Vulnerability Research Institute at the University of South Carolina. 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Turmoil, worry swirl over cuts to key federal agencies as hurricane season begins
Turmoil, worry swirl over cuts to key federal agencies as hurricane season begins

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time41 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Turmoil, worry swirl over cuts to key federal agencies as hurricane season begins

WASHINGTON (AP) — With predictions for a busy hurricane season beginning Sunday, experts in storms and disasters are worried about something potentially as chaotic as the swirling winds: Massive cuts to the federal system that forecasts, tracks and responds to hurricanes. Experts are alarmed over the large-scale staff reductions, travel and training restrictions and grant cut-offs since President Donald Trump took office at both the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which prepares for and responds to hurricanes, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which tracks and forecasts them. 'My nightmare is a major catastrophic storm hitting an area that is reeling from the impact of all of this nonsense from the Trump administration and people will die. And that could happen in Florida, that could happen in Texas, that could happen in South Carolina,' said Susan Cutter, the director of the Hazards and Vulnerability Research Institute at the University of South Carolina. 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Emergency management requires knowing where to get things, who to call, how things work and how to get it done quickly — which comes from experience and establishing relationships with state officials, Montano and Cutter said. What's happening reminds former Federal Emergency Management Agency Director Craig Fugate of 2005, the year Hurricane Katrina devastated Louisiana and exposed inexperienced and poorly prepared governments at all levels, especially the then-FEMA chief who came from a horse-rearing association. Fugate said he's especially worried about top experienced disaster people leaving FEMA. FEMA canceled various emergency management trainings this spring, moved others online and restricted travel to events such as the National Hurricane Conference. Some trainings have resumed. 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He warned that the agency will only do what the law requires and shift more costs to states. But Koon noted that states haven't budgeted for FEMA's changes, adding: "The biggest issue right now is just the uncertainty.' Some states — which coordinate disaster operations — are experienced in catastrophes, have well trained staff and will do fine, such as Texas and Florida, Fugate said. But it's the poorer states that worry the experts. The feds often pick up the entire bill in big disasters and most of it in smaller ones. In the Trump administration, disaster declarations have been denied or delayed. When disaster declarations were issued for nine states last week, some had been pending for two months and others were only partially approved. 'We've just relied on FEMA for so much for so long and not knowing who's going to fill the gap and how we're going to fill it is really scary," said University at Albany emergency management professor Jeannette Sutton. Hurricane center dodges NOAA cuts NOAA, the parent agency of the National Weather Service, has undergone a series of dramatic job cuts, with some people then reinstated. A sizable chunk of the weather service's 121 local field offices as of late March had vacancy rates of more than 20%, what's seen by outsiders as a critical level of understaffing. Local weather offices are crucial in helping people translate national warnings into what to do locally. 'It should be all hands on deck and we're being hollowed out," former NWS director Louis Uccellini said. But the National Hurricane Center, which tracks and warns of hurricanes in the Atlantic, Pacific and Caribbean, has been spared. Acting NOAA Administrator Laura Grimm, National Weather Service Director Ken Graham and National Hurricane Center Director Michael Brennan said the agency is prepared for the season with the Miami-based storm center fully staffed and so are the planes that fly into storms. For the first time this year, the hurricane center will incorporate artificial intelligence into forecasting because it has shown to improve predictions generally, Brennan said. 'Our services have never been better,' Graham said. 'Our ability to serve this country has never been better. And it will be this year as well.' But beyond the hurricane center, weather balloons launches have been curtailed because of lack of staffing. In some places, balloon launches have dropped from twice a day to once a day. NOAA hopes to get more balloons launched if needed, Brennan said. Data from the balloons is crucial for understanding steering currents and needed for forecasts, Uccellini said. He said when hurricanes threatened during his tenure he would order the launch of several extra balloons in the Great Plains to help figure out if storms would hit the United States. 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Turmoil, worry swirl over cuts to key federal agencies as hurricane season begins
Turmoil, worry swirl over cuts to key federal agencies as hurricane season begins

Washington Post

timean hour ago

  • Washington Post

Turmoil, worry swirl over cuts to key federal agencies as hurricane season begins

WASHINGTON — With predictions for a busy hurricane season beginning Sunday, experts in storms and disasters are worried about something potentially as chaotic as the swirling winds: Massive cuts to the federal system that forecasts, tracks and responds to hurricanes. Experts are alarmed over the large-scale staff reductions , travel and training restrictions and grant cut-offs since President Donald Trump took office at both the Federal Emergency Management Agency , which prepares for and responds to hurricanes, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration , which tracks and forecasts them.

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