NOAA's Big Umbrella
To understand what NOAA does, let's break it down: Weather, Oceans, and Atmospheric predictions—combined with a side of charting and conserving. This agency is responsible for a plethora of activities: from hurricane warnings and coastal mapping to fishery management and solar storm tracking. Sure, it sounds like NOAA’s employees have superhuman skills; indeed, their historical roots run coast-deep, thanks to pioneers like the Survey of the Coast initiated by Thomas Jefferson back in 1807.
But wait, there's more! NOAA carries a legacy surpassing its own name—predating it by nearly a century—through agencies like the National Weather Service and the National Geodetic Survey. The weather service, after all, is the hotline that keeps Americans informed about the skies above their heads, with 122 forecast offices scattered from sea to shining sea (and Puerto Rico and Guam, too!).
Keep an eye out for those NOAA pilots zooming into storms or the satellites circling the globe; they're working overtime to ensure the environment is as healthy as your Twitter feed.
For the U.S. and the world watching, the cuts are more than just numbers; they're a colder (and less predictable) climate.
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