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NOAA under the second presidency of Donald Trump

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NOAA under the second presidency of Donald Trump
Employees terminated880[1]
Department of Government Efficiency involvement
Contracts terminated29
Contract total value$28,557,729
(2025 USD)
Claimed contract savings$9,306,229
(2025 USD)
Leases terminated19
Claimed lease savings$7,168,685
(2025 USD)

Following the second inauguration of Donald Trump as President of the United States, and the creation of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) on January 20, 2025, several major changes occurred at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), including hundreds of employees being terminated, dozens of federal contracts and leases being terminated, and executive orders, which affected the operations of NOAA.

Federal employee terminations

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On February 27, 2025, the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) abruptly terminated around 880 employees, over 7.3% of the total staff from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Before the terminations, NOAA had approximately 12,000 employees that included 6,773 scientists and engineers.[1][2][3][4] Shortly after the firings, William Alsup, Senior Judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California, ruled that the OPM "had no authority to order the firings of probationary employees".[1]

Rick Spinrad, the former NOAA Administrator who was picked by former president Joe Biden, stated firings occurred at the National Hurricane Center and Storm Prediction Center.[2] Spinrad stated 25% of the NOAA Environmental Modeling Center was terminated.[2] Congressman Jared Huffman responsed to the firings by saying the entire American public "depend on NOAA for free, accurate forecasts, severe weather alerts, and emergency information".[1] Daniel Swain, a scientist at the University of California, in response to the firings said, "Most or all private weather companies in US (including forecasts that you see on TV or your favorite app) are built directly atop backbone of taxpayer-funded instrumentation, data, predictive modeling, & forecasts provided by NOAA".[1] On March 5, 113 members of the United States Congress sent a letter to the United States Department of Commerce to "express profound outrage" to the termination of 880 NOAA employees.[5] The 113 members of Congress went on to say:

"The termination of hundreds of dedicated scientists, meteorologists, and ocean experts, particularly from the National Weather Service, is a reckless decision that puts American lives at risk, undermines critical climate research now and in the future, and threatens the economic well-being of communities across the nation...The assertion that these layoffs will somehow improve “efficiency” is not only misleading but outright dangerous. Efficiency is not only measured in dollars saved but more importantly in lives protected and disasters mitigated. NOAA saves money and American lives. In 2020, NOAA’s hurricane forecasting saved approximately $5 billion per major hurricane landfall. NOAA’s mission is to provide accurate, science-driven information that helps communities prepare for and respond to environmental threats. A reduction in personnel cripples the very infrastructure that Americans depend on to withstand climate-driven catastrophes."

— 113 members of the United States Congress[5]

On March 6, over 1,000 people protested outside of the NOAA office complex in Boulder, Colorado and on March 7, a protest occurred outside of the National Weather Center in Norman, Oklahoma; both to protest the 880 NOAA terminations.[6][7]

On March 8, The New York Times reported at least 1,000 more NOAA employees were set to be terminated, downsizing NOAA's pre-terminations workforce by 20%.[8] Throughout the day on March 8, several terminated NOAA employees posted on X and Bluesky they were rehired by the Department of Commerce.[9][10] Andy Hazelton, a former physical scientist at the NOAA Environmental Modeling Center (EMC), reported none of the EMC terminated employees were rehired.[11]

Effects of the terminations

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A weather balloon launch station maintained by the National Weather Service in Alaska was forced to cease launches due to the terminations resulting in staff shortages.[4] The NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory (GLERL), a branch of the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research announced the terminations resulted in a staff shortage and the office would be taking an "indefinite hiatus".[12][4][13] Nicole Rice, an employee at the GLERL who was terminated reported 20% of the GLERL office was terminated.[13] Axios reported that one of the "deepest of NOAA's cuts was to the Office of Space Commerce" (OSC).[4] Researchers, including dual-role University of Oklahoma (OU)-federal researchers at the National Weather Center, located on the OU campus were terminated, which included students in the OU School of Meteorology.[14] Ten employees were fired from the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, located on at Princeton University.[15]

On March 4, the National Weather Service office in Paducah, Kentucky cancelled their student volunteer program and to "suspend new arrangements for prospective meteorology students to shadow at our office" due to the terminations.[16] The National Weather Service office in Boston, Massachusetts, had over 36% of its staff terminated, leaving only seven meteorologists, which is four less than what is required for minimal staffing to run the 24/7 office.[17] On March 7, the National Weather Service offices in Albany, New York, and Gray, Maine, stopped launching weather balloons due to staffing issues from the terminations.[18] The terminations are expected to cause a loss in the ability to predict events such as blizzards and tornadoes, not only affecting the U.S. but neighboring Canada as well.[19]

Involvement of DOGE

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NOAA, at the recommendation of DOGE, terminating a cooperative agreement with the University of Maine

On February 4, 2025, The Guardian reported employees of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) had entered the headquarters of the NOAA in Silver Spring, Maryland, reporting "they apparently just sort of walked past security and said: 'Get out of my way,' and they're looking for access for the IT systems, as they have in other agencies".[20] ABC News reported on February 6 that DOGE employees had gained access to the NOAA computer systems. Staff from the NOAA Information Technology group and the Department of Commerce attempted to keep the operatives from the systems according to security protocols, but the operatives defied authorized security staff and forcefully entered the facilities.[20] Two Democratic Congress members characterized DOGE's presence in NOAA systems as "hackers". NOAA staff noted that the actions of the operatives could directly cause risk to human life by hindering NOAA and National Weather Service operations.[21][20] ABC also reported that operatives were also looking for anything connected to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) on bulletin boards and were inspecting bathroom signs to ensure compliance with Trump's executive orders.[21]

On February 12, Grist reported that the Trump administration started to shrink the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA),[22] nearly 170 employees at the EPA's Office of Environmental Justice and External Civil Rights were placed on paid administrative leave.[23] On March 2, Ryan Maue, the chief scientist for NOAA during the first presidency of Donald Trump,[24] suggested on X that the United States House of Representatives should redirect all NOAA funds saved by DOGE to the National Weather Service.[25][26]

On March 9, The Salt Lake Tribune reported the wife of Brent Pounds, a former officer for the NOAA Commissioned Officer Corps, was assisting DOGE and was giving notes to Elon Musk.[27]

NOAA contract involvement

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On February 17, 2025, DOGE released the names of 1,127 federal contracts spanning 39 federal departments and agencies, including the NOAA, that DOGE says had been terminated.[28] A Wall Street Journal analysis of these over 1,000 contracts found inaccuracies of DOGE's reported savings, including counting contracts multiple times, listing contracts that have already been paid as savings, and misrepresenting potential savings based on contract limits rather than actual spending.[29] On February 24, 2025, DOGE released more documents, with the total nearing 2,300 contracts released. The Associated Press found that "nearly 40%" of the terminated contracts would not save the government any money.[30]

As of March 2, 2025, DOGE released 29 NOAA-specific contracts it claims to have terminated, partially terminated, or interacted with.[31][32]

NOAA department Contract value Claimed savings Description/Notes
NOS $163,478 $9,800 DOGE announced the termination of a contract with Elevate USA Inc. for "DEIA training" for the National Ocean Service (NOS).[33][34]
NMFS $421,548 $366,000 DOGE announced the termination of a contract for "DEIA support services" for the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS).[35]
NMFS $348,400 $164,840 DOGE announced the termination of a contract for "DEIA support services" for the National Marine Fisheries Service's Human Capital Management Office (NMFS HCMO).[36]
NMFS $1,681,746 $1,034,304 DOGE announced the partial termination of a contract for the National Marine Fisheries Service's "first-ever national Equity and Environmental Justice (EEJ) Strategy to guide the agency as it focuses on serving all communities more equitably and effectively.[37]
OAR $106,250 $0 DOGE announced the termination of a contract for the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research (OAR) for "non-personal service for JEDI training".[38] The company contracted by NOAA, The Avarna Group LLC, has a company expiration date of January 6, 2026.[39]
OAR $300,000 $0 DOGE announced the termination of a contract for the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research for study on "diversity, equity, inclusion, belonging, accessibility, and justice on the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) Independent Science Studies (NASISS)".[40]
NWS $990,087 $0 DOGE announced the termination of a contract for an "organizational climate assessment" for the National Weather Service (NWS) on February 13, 2025.[41][42] On February 3, prior to the termination, NOAA, at the recommendation of DOGE, modified the contract’s value down to $944,319.[43]
OAR $439,282 $0 DOGE announced the termination of a contract for a "study on equitable distribution of fisheries management" for the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research.[44]
OAR $9,900,000 $0 DOGE announced the partial termination of a contract for "strategic foresight and performance management consultant services" for the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research.[45]
NMFS $184,000 $0 DOGE announced the termination of a contract that would provide "training on equity and environmental justice" to the National Marine Fisheries Service. Per the receipt released by DOGE, it was "last modified" in September 2024.[46]
OAR $27,000 $0 DOGE announced the termination of a contract with an Australian company to "revise and update the Atlantis Ecosystem model to support NOAA's Earth System Model framework to project the response of fishes and food webs under scenarios of future climate change and invasive species" for the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research. Per the receipt released by DOGE, it was "last modified" in September 2024.[47]
OAR $500,000 $0 DOGE announced the termination of a contract with the National Academy of Sciences for a "study on drought and climate change" for the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research. Per the receipt released by DOGE, it was "last modified" in June 2024.[48]
OAR $643,158 $0 DOGE announced the termination of a contract to provide "science related communication services" to the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research. The termination reason stated by DOGE was that the "company is associated with others not in-line with the President's Agenda".[49]
OAR $643,880 $107,313 DOGE announced the termination of a contract to provide "science related communication services" to the NOAA Climate Program Office (CPO). The termination reason stated by DOGE was that the "company is associated with others not in-line with the President's Agenda".[50]
NMFS $3,204,694 $2,598,174 DOGE announced the termination of a contract to provide "video and digital media communications support, video production, & podcasts production" to the National Marine Fisheries Service.[51]
OAR $96,639 $0 DOGE announced the termination of a contract for the University of Illinois to "receive, review, and manage data" for the World Data Center and to "establish best practices for data and metadata formatting" for the United Nations' World Meteorological Organization.[52]
NWS $199,867 $0 DOGE announced the modification of a National Weather Service (NWS)-funded contract from For Your Information, Inc. due to the contracting company being an "office of facilities staffing analysis". The released receipt by DOGE stated the modification was to "extend period of performance by 6 months".[53]
OAR $36,805 $5,257 DOGE announced the termination of a contract for "coaching services for multiple staff transitioning to a supervisory position" in the NOAA Physical Sciences Laboratory through June 2025.[54]
OCAO $80,922 $55,998 DOGE announced the termination of a contract for the NOAA Office of the Chief Administrative Officer (OCAO) for "archibus and builder tools, training, and development" from Golden Wolf, LLC.[55]
OAR $140,000 $105,000 DOGE announced the termination of a contract that was "to provide NOAA with a gold standard partnership at the annual Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities (HACU) Conference".[56]
NMFS $277,521 $130,490 DOGE announced the termination of a contract for the "development of strategic and implementation plans" for the NOAA Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center.[57]
NMFS $249,977 $146,322 DOGE announced the termination of a contract for an "EEJ project cultural liaison" for the NOAA Pacific Islands Regional Office.[58]
OAR $466,884 $158,625 DOGE announced the termination of a contract for an "outreach coordinator on the science, engineering and technical support services" for the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research.[59]
NOAA $567,840 $189,280 DOGE announced the termination of a contract for NOAA' Nursing Mother Program Support.[60]
NOS $846,483 $227,750 DOGE announced the termination of a contract for "program office coordination and operations support services" for the National Ocean Service.[61]
OAR $590,273 $446,920 DOGE announced the termination of a contract for "science, engineering, and technical support services" and "other environmental services" from FedWriters, Inc. for the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research.[62]
NOAA $1,052,914 $631,748 DOGE announced the termination of a contract for "project and program management" for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Per the receipt released by DOGE, the contract was "last modified" in September 2023.[63]
OAR $2,014,381 $1,073,496 DOGE announced the deobligation of $1,073,496 from NOAA's Uncrewed Systems Research Transition Office (UxSRTO), managed by the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research.[64][65] In July 2023, NOAA's UxSRTO reported they had found "no significant impact for the funding, procurement, and operation of NOAA small uncrewed aircraft systems", and the UxSRTO program was shut down by the OAR in March 2024.[66][67]
NOS $2,383,700 $1,854,912 DOGE announced the termination of a contract for "scientific and technical support services for spatial planning" for NOAA's National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science (NCCOS).[68] This contract was over 10.5% of the total NCCOS budget.[69]
NOAA $4,523,123 $1,499,374 NOAA, at the recommendation of DOGE, terminated the University of Maine's multi-million-dollar Maine Sea Grant, saying "it has been determined that the program activities proposed to be carried out in Year 2 of the Maine Sea Grant Omnibus Award are no longer relevant to the focus of the Administration’s priorities and program objectives".[70]

Lease terminations

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On March 3, 2025, The Verge & Axios reported leaked information from DOGE saying, NOAA was planning to terminate the building leases for the National Centers for Environmental Prediction's building in College Park, Maryland, which also houses the Environmental Modeling Center and the Weather Prediction Center, and the Radar Operations Center's building on the University of Oklahoma's campus in Norman, Oklahoma.[71][72] On March 5, M. Scott Carter, the chief political reporter for The Oklahoman, falsely reported "the National Weather Center is among many Oklahoma offices that have been included on a Department of Government Efficiency list of federal buildings to be closed".[73]

On March 5, 2025, DOGE announced the termination of 19 various NOAA building leases.[31][32]

NOAA branch Location Annual lease cost Claimed savings Description/Notes
NOAA OLE Seward, Alaska $22,665 $24,554 DOGE announced the termination of a 922 square feet (85.7 m2) office space for the NOAA's Fisheries Office of Law Enforcement in Seward, Alaska.
Unknown Juneau, Alaska $20,520 $1,710 DOGE announced the termination of a 1,595 square feet (148.2 m2) office space for NOAA, without listing what branch used the space.[74]
NOAA MNMS Newport News, Virginia $17,890 $5,963 DOGE announced the termination of a 911 square feet (84.6 m2) office space for NOAA in Hampton, Virginia. This was actually a lease termination for the NOAA Monitor National Marine Sanctuary in Newport News, Virginia.
NOAA CFLSIO Seffner, Florida $21,855 $7,285 DOGE announced the termination of a 1,525 square feet (141.7 m2) office space for the NOAA's Central Florida Lot Seafood Inspection Office (CFLSIO) in Seffner, Florida.
Air Resources Laboratory’s Field Research Division Idaho Falls, Idaho $69,756 $488,290 DOGE announced the termination of a 13,681 square feet (1,271.0 m2) office space for NOAA's Air Resources Laboratory’s Field Research Division (NOAA ARL) in Idaho Falls, Idaho.
Unknown Salem, Oregon $8,040 $670 DOGE announced the termination of a 236 square feet (21.9 m2) office space for NOAA, without listing what branch used the space. However, according to the Department of Commerce, NOAA had no offices in Salem, Oregon.[75]
Unknown Hilo, Hawaii $164,391 $150,692 DOGE announced the termination of a 4,638 square feet (430.9 m2) office space for NOAA, without listing what branch used the space.
Unknown Baton Rouge, Louisiana $71,102 $59,251 DOGE announced the termination of a 2,400 square feet (220 m2) office space for NOAA, without listing what branch used the space.
NOAA OLE Salisbury, Maryland $10,882 $2,720 DOGE announced the termination of a 826 square feet (76.7 m2) office space for NOAA's Fisheries Office of Law Enforcement in Salisbury, Maryland.
Unknown Northfield, New Jersey $29,265 $43,898 DOGE announced the termination of a 1,035 square feet (96.2 m2) office space for NOAA, without listing what branch used the space.
Unknown Port Angeles, Washington $100,232 $217,169 DOGE announced the termination of a 4,556 square feet (423.3 m2) office space for NOAA, without listing what branch used the space.
NOAA NOS Key Largo, Florida $252,011 $1,449,064 DOGE announced the termination of a 7,993 square feet (742.6 m2) office space for the NOAA's Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary and Eco Discovery Center, a branch of the National Ocean Service, located in Key Largo, Florida.
NOAA OLE Sunrise, Florida $51,429 $77,144 DOGE announced the termination of a 1,858 square feet (172.6 m2) office space for NOAA's Fisheries Office of Law Enforcement in Sunrise, Florida.
Unknown Boise, Idaho $111,448 $27,862 DOGE announced the termination of a 5,156 square feet (479.0 m2) office space for NOAA, without listing what branch used the space.
NOAA ROC Norman, Oklahoma $484,325 $4,157,122 DOGE announced the termination of the NOAA Radar Operations Center's 18,743 square feet (1,741.3 m2) building on the University of Oklahoma campus, in Norman, Oklahoma. Information on this termination was leaked to the press two days before the formal release/announcement by DOGE.[72][71]
Unknown Narragansett Pier, Rhode Island $23,937 $197,484 DOGE announced the termination of a 674 square feet (62.6 m2) office space for NOAA, without listing what branch used the space.[76]
NOAA RGA Barre, Vermont $9,310 $12,413 DOGE announced the termination of a 287 square feet (26.7 m2) office space for NOAA's Regional Geodetic Advisor (RGA) in Barre, Vermont, which serves as the liaison between NOAA and the U.S. National Geodetic Survey.
Unknown Eureka, California $19,793 $65,977 DOGE announced the termination of a 823 square feet (76.5 m2) office space for NOAA in Eureka, California, without listing what branch used the space. According to the NOAA, the only office in Eureka is the National Weather Service's Weather Forecast Office (WFO).[77]
NOAA OLE Wall, New Jersey $51,262 $179,417 DOGE announced the termination of a 1,768 square feet (164.3 m2) office space for NOAA's Fisheries Office of Law Enforcement in Wall, New Jersey.

Other changes

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Webpage replaced by « THIS FILE IS DELETED BY EXECUTIVE ORDER. ».

Following Executive Order 14172, signed by President Donald Trump on January 20, 2025, the National Weather Service changed all maps and products to refer to the Gulf of Mexico as the "Gulf of America."[78][79]

In March 2025, amid the 2025 United States government online resource removals, an unknown executive order signed by President Donald Trump resulted in the NOAA Radar Next Program Overview document being removed from NOAA servers.[80]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Mackintosh, Thomas (February 28, 2025). "Hundreds in US climate agency fired in latest cuts". BBC. Retrieved March 1, 2025.
  2. ^ a b c Dance, Scott; Patel, Kasha (March 1, 2025). "Trump fired hundreds at NOAA, Weather Service. Here's what that means for forecasts". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on March 1, 2025. Retrieved March 1, 2025.
  3. ^ Budryk, Zack (February 27, 2025). "NOAA begins firing hundreds of staffers". The Hill. Retrieved February 27, 2025.
  4. ^ a b c d Freedman, Andrew (February 28, 2025). "NOAA layoffs threaten weather, climate forecasts". Axios. Retrieved March 1, 2025.
  5. ^ a b "Dear Secretary Lutnick, We write to express our profound outrage regarding the recent mass layoffs at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)" (PDF). United States Congress. March 5, 2025.
  6. ^ "Over 1,000 protest NOAA scientist layoffs in Colorado". Fijian Broadcasting Corporation. Reuters. March 7, 2025. Retrieved March 8, 2025.
  7. ^ Grubbs, Hayden (March 7, 2025). "'Science is who we are': OU Green Week holds rally in support of National Weather Center, NOAA amid nationwide layoffs". OU Daily.
  8. ^ Zhong, Raymond; Gaffney, Austyn; Flavelle, Christopher (March 8, 2025). "NOAA Said to Be Planning to Shrink Staff by 20 Percent". The New York Times.
  9. ^ Velocity, Max (March 8, 2025). "HUGE NEWS! Some of the National Weather Service employees who were fired a couple of weeks ago are having their terminations rescinded! They will receive backpay and be allowed to return to work!" (Post on 𝕏). 𝕏. @MaxVelocityWX.
  10. ^ Wicklund, Chris (March 8, 2025). "AMAZING NEWS! Our NWS probationary employees recently laid off have woken up to emails today that the firings across NOAA/NWS have been rescinded to some and that employees can return back to work! Can any NWS employees confirm for their offices? 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉" (Post on 𝕏). 𝕏. @WickyDubs2.
  11. ^ Hazelton, Andy (March 8, 2025). "Want to be clear that this is *not* across the board. I haven't received any reinstatement, nor have any of my EMC colleagues to my knowledge. This process has been very chaotic with a lack of transparency throughout, and that seems to be continuing. Hoping for the best though" (Post on 𝕏). 𝕏. @AndyHazelton.
  12. ^ Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory (February 27, 2025). "Due to a reduction in staff, NOAA GLERL's communications services will be taking an indefinite hiatus" (Post on 𝕏). 𝕏 (Formerly Twitter). United States Department of Commerce. Retrieved March 1, 2025.
  13. ^ a b Gorman, Julia (February 27, 2025). "Former employee: 20% of Ann Arbor NOAA office cut, community to feel impacts". WZZM. American Broadcasting Company (ABC). Retrieved March 1, 2025.
  14. ^ Fathepure, Anusha; Gillespie, Willie (February 28, 2025). "National Weather Center employees, OU meteorology students part of nationwide NOAA layoffs". OU Daily. Retrieved March 1, 2025.
  15. ^ "NOAA firings hit the birthplace of weather and climate forecasting". Science. March 4, 2025. Retrieved March 5, 2025.
  16. ^ National Weather Service Paducah, Kentucky (March 4, 2025). "Unfortunately, due to limited staff availability, we will have to cancel our student volunteer program for 2025 and suspend new arrangements for prospective meteorology students to shadow at our office until further notice. We are very sorry for these developments!" (Post on 𝕏). 𝕏 (Formerly Twitter). National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Archived from the original on March 5, 2025.
  17. ^ Holthaus, Eric (March 5, 2025). "Inside the 'slow-rolling catastrophe' of Trump's NOAA cuts". Fast Company. Retrieved March 6, 2025.
  18. ^ Hopkins, Mike; Buchanan, Susan (March 7, 2025). "Intermittent Suspension of Radiosonde Observations at Albany, New York, and Gray, Maine, Effective Immediately" (Press release). Iowa Environmental Mesonet. Silver Spring, Maryland: National Weather Service Headquarters. Archived from the original on March 8, 2025.
  19. ^ Kives, Bartley (March 7, 2025). "Cuts to U.S. weather forecasting, climate science create dark clouds for Canadian counterparts". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.
  20. ^ a b c "Doge staffers enter Noaa headquarters and incite reports of cuts and threats". The Guardian. February 5, 2025.
  21. ^ a b ABC Climate Unit (February 5, 2025). "DOGE now has access to NOAA's IT systems; reviewing DEI program, sources say". ABC News.
  22. ^ Younes, Lylla (February 12, 2025). "Trump's push for 'efficiency' may destroy the EPA. What does that mean for you?". Grist. Retrieved February 12, 2025.
  23. ^ Borunda, Alejandra (February 7, 2025). "EPA employees who work on environmental justice are put on leave". NPR. Retrieved February 12, 2025.
  24. ^ "Climate science critic to be chief scientist at key U.S. climate research agency". Science. American Association for the Advancement of Science. September 22, 2020. Retrieved March 3, 2025.
  25. ^ Maue, Ryan (March 2, 2025). "Section X: Redirection of NOAA IRA Funds to National Weather Service" (Post on 𝕏). 𝕏 (Formerly Twitter). @RyanMaue.
  26. ^ Maue, Ryan (March 2, 2025). "$1.6-$1.8 billion remains unspent, perhaps more. House budget bill next week could insert this language and call it a day" (Post on 𝕏). 𝕏 (Formerly Twitter). @RyanMaue. Retrieved March 3, 2025.
  27. ^ Marchant, Brock (March 9, 2025). "Meet the Utah software engineer and distillery co-owner giving notes to Elon Musk and DOGE". The Salt Lake Tribune. Retrieved March 11, 2025.
  28. ^ Kim, Soo Rin; Steakin, Will. "DOGE claims $55 billion in government cuts so far – but the figure is hard to verify". ABC News. Retrieved February 22, 2025.
  29. ^ Caitlin, Ostroff; Shifflett, Shane; Benedict, James (February 22, 2025). "DOGE Claims It Has Saved Billions. See Where". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved February 26, 2025.
  30. ^ Foley, Ryan J. (February 25, 2025). "Nearly 40% of contracts canceled by Musk's DOGE are expected to produce no savings". AP News. AP. Retrieved February 26, 2025.
  31. ^ a b "Savings". Department of Government Efficiency. February 24, 2025. Retrieved February 26, 2025.
  32. ^ a b Siken, Justin (February 19, 2025). "List of All Contracts Terminated by DOGE". HigherGov. Retrieved February 28, 2025.
  33. ^ Culbreth, Wendy; Walton, Michelle (January 23, 2025). "Contract 241045845: "DEIA Training"". Department of Government Efficiency. Ridgeland, South Carolina: Federal Procurement Data System / National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Archived from the original on February 26, 2025. Retrieved February 26, 2025.
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  36. ^ Cowdrey, Monica; Montoya, Hannah (January 28, 2025). "Contract 241610331: NMFS Human Capital Management Office (HCMO) Diversity and Inclusion Contractor Support Services". Department of Government Efficiency. McLean, Virginia: Federal Procurement Data System / National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved February 28, 2025.
  37. ^ Nededog, Carina; Waugh, Sarah (February 20, 2025). "Contract 241645089: Modification for Partial Termination for Government Convenience in accordance with Executive Order and OPM memorandum regarding DEIA, EEJ activities". Federal Procurement Data System. Seattle, Washington: Department of Government Efficiency / National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved February 28, 2025.
  38. ^ Mas, Stephanie (January 27, 2025). "Contract 1305M323PNRMN0583". Federal Procurement Data System. Natick, Massachusetts: Department of Government Efficiency / National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved February 28, 2025.
  39. ^ "THE AVARNA GROUP LLC". G2Xchange. Retrieved February 28, 2025.
  40. ^ Hamilton, Julia L.; Bueno, Bianca (January 31, 2025). "Contract 1305M323FNRMA0221: Task Order for Study on Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, Belonging, Accessibility, and Justice on the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) Independent Science Studies (NASISS) IDIQ for NOAA/OAR". Federal Procurement Data System. Washington, D.C.: Department of Government Efficiency / National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved February 28, 2025.
  41. ^ Smith, Angela N.; Shewmaker, Jacquelyn A. (February 13, 2025). "Contract 1305M224C0038: "Organizational Climate Assessment". Federal Procurement Data System. Germantown, Maryland: Department of Government Efficiency / National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Archived from the original on February 19, 2025. Retrieved March 1, 2025.
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  44. ^ Hamilton, Julia L.; Royster, Angela (February 6, 2025). "Contract 1305M323FNRMA0027: Study On Equitable Distribution Of Fisheries Management, Phase 2". Federal Procurement Data System. Washington, D.C.: Department of Government Efficiency / National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved March 1, 2025.
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