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		Illinois congressman pushes for NWS funding as Trump’s budget faces 
		scrutiny
		[July 14, 2025]  
		By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributor 
		(The Center Square) – Amid staffing shortages and public concern over 
		natural disasters, the National Weather Service is defending its ability 
		to fulfill its core mission—even as it operates under the strain of past 
		budget cuts and ongoing reorganization.
 Illinois U.S. Rep. Eric Sorensen, D-Rockford, a former meteorologist, 
		said he and others are pushing bipartisan legislation to strengthen NWS 
		operations and staffing, warning that shortfalls may be putting lives at 
		risk.
 
 “We have to get President [Donald] Trump to understand that investing in 
		the National Weather Service, making sure we have more accurate weather 
		models, could maybe make these types of disasters a thing of the past,” 
		Sorensen told NBC.
 
 Under Trump’s fiscal year 2026 budget plan, the National Oceanic and 
		Atmospheric Administration faces cuts, but NWS funding gets a proposed 
		6.7% increase.
 
 At a recent Senate confirmation hearing, Neil Jacobs, Trump’s nominee to 
		lead NOAA, defended the cuts.
 
 “I support the president’s budget,” Jacobs told lawmakers, adding that 
		mission-essential functions would continue.
 
		 
		Illinois has two National Weather Service forecast offices, one in 
		Lincoln and another in Romeoville. These are two of about 32 forecast 
		offices nationwide funded through the agency’s $120 million 
		Administrative Management Division budget.
 In fiscal year 2023, the entire NWS was funded at $1.4 billion.
 
 “The National Weather Service continues to meet its core missions amid 
		recent reorganization efforts and is taking steps to prioritize critical 
		research and services that keep the American public safe and informed,” 
		NOAA's National Weather Service spokesman Erica Grow Cei told The Center 
		Square in a statement.
 
 Cei said NOAA leadership is taking steps to address those who took a 
		voluntary early retirement option.
 
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            U.S. Rep. Eric Sorensen, D-Ill - BlueRoomStream 
            
			
			
			 
            “NWS continues to conduct short-term Temporary Duty assignments (TDYs), 
			and is in the process of conducting a series of Reassignment 
			Opportunity Notices (RONs) to fill roles at NWS field locations with 
			the greatest operational need,” said Cei. “A targeted number of 
			permanent, mission-critical field positions will soon be advertised 
			under an exception to the Department-wide hiring freeze to further 
			stabilize frontline operation.”
 Sorensen stressed the need for stronger communication tools, warning 
			systems and a long-term investment in the agency’s capabilities.
 
 “We take it for granted that our phones are going to go off in the 
			middle of the night when a tornado warning or flash flood warning is 
			issued. But when that happens, we need to know there’s going to be a 
			way for us to escape. We have to keep working on social science to 
			make sure the communication of meteorology gets better,” said 
			Sorensen.
 
 During a recent U.S. Senate hearing, U.S. Sen. Ed Markey, 
			D-Massachusetts, wasn’t convinced by Jacobs who claimed the proposed 
			27% budget cut was simply a shift from research to operations and 
			wouldn’t impact the agency’s essential functions.
 
 “I disagree with you. A 27% cut will have an impact. There’s a 
			definite ripple effect when that kind of funding is slashed,” said 
			Markey. “Weather readiness without funding is a hallucination.”
 
			
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