The Trump administration is facing outrage and despair in the wake of deadly flooding in Texas, as Democrats in Congress are asking whether the president’s cuts to the National Weather Service limited emergency response efforts — and, if so, how.
Nearly 100 people, including more than two dozen children, have been confirmed dead and dozens more remain missing following the flooding in Kerr County. Multiple Texas officials, including the mayor of Kerrville, which suffered immense devastation, have criticized the NWS’s forecasting and warnings ahead of the flood.
In a letter Monday to the agency’s inspector general, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., asked for an investigation into what role, if any, the Trump administration’s recent layoffs and other reductions in staff may have played in the death toll and property damage.
Schumer’s letter cites a New York Times report that quotes former NWS officials as saying the agency’s forecasts were as good as could be expected, but that key staffing shortages due to Trump’s cuts left areas without officials to coordinate with local emergency managers to warn local residents and help them evacuate. “To honor the lives of those lost, we have a responsibility to the American people to determine whether preventable failures contributed to this tragedy — and to ensure that it never happens again,” Schumer wrote.








