The Texas Floods Were a Natural Disaster, Not a Policy Disaster
There's no evidence that cuts to the National Weather Service impacted the response to the weekend's tragic flash floods.

It's a news cycle as old as the weather.
A terrible natural disaster results in the loss of life and property.
The chattering classes immediately begin to heap blame on their political enemies for bringing about the disaster, while partisans on the other side insist that they are blameless.
Initial comments from officials—who often have an interest in defending the performance of their agency—are taken at face value or taken out of context.
Such has been the case with the weekend's flash floods in central Texas, which have reportedly killed 94 people thus far, including (tragically) dozens of children at a summer camp along the Guadalupe River.
In the immediate aftermath, some local and state officials in Texas were quick to point the finger at the federal National Weather Service (NWS), whose initial forecasts from earlier in the week predicted much less rain than the region ended up getting.
This criticism was accepted by liberal commentators and Democratic elected officials, who in turn blamed faulty NWS forecasts on the Trump administration's Department of Government Efficiency cuts to the agency, which did leave some local Texas NWS positions unfilled.
Trump & Musk gutted the National Weather Service. The result was predictable: A bad forecast leading to the death of children in a horrific flood. https://t.co/OCqTwRSsGi
— Senator Scott Wiener (@Scott_Wiener) July 5, 2025
Do you think the Warning Coordination Meteorologist position at the Austin/San Antonio office was important?
He left in April as part of the DOGE cuts which offered early retirement to reduce the workforce. It's now vacant, part of the strategy of reducing staff through… pic.twitter.com/AVe4joUqCm
— Ryan Grim (@ryangrim) July 5, 2025
The Warming Coordination Specialist in the Austin/San Antonio area was forced into early retirement by Trump and Elon's DOGE firings.
Via @ryangrim pic.twitter.com/vDwqcl5FPJ
— Rachel Bitecofer ???????? (@RachelBitecofer) July 6, 2025
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D–N.Y.) has called for a probe into whether cuts to the NWS played a role in the weekend's disaster.
NWS has contradicted claims that it was understaffed in the run-up to the weekend's floods.
"We had adequate staffing. We had adequate technology," Greg Waller, service coordination hydrologist with the NWS West Gulf River Forecast Center in Fort Worth, told The Texas Tribune. An official with the NWS union also told the Tribune that local staffing was adequate to provide timely warnings.
Independent meteorologists have also defended NWS's performance.
Texas meteorologist Matt Lanza writes on his Substack that "we have seen absolutely nothing to suggest that current staffing or budget issues within [the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration] and the NWS played any role at all in this event."
Lanza writes that while federal officials' weather modeling and forecasts of rains from earlier in the week underpredicted the eventual flooding, these models and warnings were also periodically revised upwards in advance of Friday's flood.
The timeline of NWS warnings also shows that it was providing advance notice of increasingly dangerous conditions in the areas that eventually experienced flash flooding.
The agency issued a flood watch on Thursday afternoon, a flash flood warning by 1 a.m. on Friday (about an hour after rains started), and a flash flood emergency urging evacuations at around 4 a.m.—about an hour before the most serious flooding occurred.
There did appear to be some delays when those NWS warnings were transmitted to the public via social media by local officials.
Lanza says that the weekend's tragic deaths from the flood resulted not from inadequate advance warning, but seemingly rather from people on the ground not responding fast enough to the warnings they were receiving.
"I think we need to focus our attention on how people in these types of locations receive warnings. This seems to be where the breakdown occurred," he writes on his Substack.
Getting people to respond quickly and appropriately to flash flood warnings, Lanza notes, is a difficult task, especially given that the weekend's flood occurred in the wee hours of the morning when most people are inside and asleep. That means they were less likely to see text warnings of the impending disaster.
More generally, meteorologists who spoke to Wired stressed that precisely predicting how much rain will fall from a thunderstorm, and where it will fall, is extremely difficult. There's always some element of chance involved.
That complicates when to warn people of potential flooding. It also makes it harder to get people to take flood warnings seriously.
More frequent and more ubiquitous extreme weather warnings can backfire, as anyone who's ever ignored a "tornado" or "flash flood" text alert on their phone should be able to appreciate.
The more warnings one receives about a disaster that doesn't end up happening, the less likely they are to take the next warning seriously.
It's worth noting, too, that even given central Texas' history of flash floods, the weekend's floods were still an outlier event.
As one meteorologist told Wired, the amount of rainfall central Texas witnessed in a six-hour period exceeded the 1,000-year rainfall rate, meaning there's less than a 0.1 percent chance of that happening in a given year.
Even the best emergency management systems will struggle with outlier events like that.
The Texas floods are, in that sense, reminiscent of the Los Angeles wildfires from earlier this year. Just as central Texas floods with relative frequency, so too does the Los Angeles hinterlands burn with relative frequency.
Like the weekend's flooding, this year's L.A. fires were more severe than normal, and thus caught people off-guard and overtaxed the systems designed to prevent and respond to them.
In the aftermath of California's fires, it was largely conservatives blaming various liberal policies for the loss of life and property.
And yet, as I wrote in the aftermath of the fires, the real culprit was bad weather, not bad public policy.
In a general sense, better public land management, better urban planning, and better insurance regulations could lessen the destruction from California wildfires. None of those things would have stopped 100-mile-an-hour winds from blowing burning embers into urban neighborhoods that have been standing for nearly a century.
Likewise, advance weather warnings, better local responsiveness, and more weather sirens can all reduce the death and destruction from flash floods. They can only do so much in the face of a 1,000-year flood that causes a river to rise 30 feet in a few hours in the middle of the night during the prime recreation season.
At the end of the day, people will pay a premium to live in the California woods, even if there's the off-hand risk that a wildfire will burn their house down. Similarly, people like to camp and recreate next to rivers during a hot Texas summer, even if there's a small risk of a flash flood.
The fact that the Trump administration's cuts to NWS didn't affect this most recent disaster in Texas doesn't tell us much about the wisdom of those cuts.
One could argue the agency is functioning well, despite having fewer staff, and that's proof that there was fat to cut at NWS.
Meteorologists in the media have countered that the Texas disaster shows how important a fully staffed NWS is for providing advance warning of impending disasters. Cuts to the agency could leave it under-resourced for future disasters.
It's a worthwhile policy discussion to have. It's not one we're having in the aftermath of the weekend's tragic floods.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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"Trump & Musk gutted the National Weather Service. The result was predictable: A bad forecast leading to the death of children in a horrific flood.:"
You get better forecasts if you pay more.
They had 5 working at the NWS instead of the usual 2. Democrats dont care about facts, just narratives.
Yes but none of them were qualified, and had no idea what they were doing, which should come to no surprise.
How do you know that? Nobody has published their credentials. Don't make things up.
They were hired by Trump admin.
Who was? When? Facts or stfu
re: "You get better forecasts if you pay more."
I see no evidence to support that claim. Countries with far more expensive weather forecasting systems than ours get equally crappy forecasts.
I’m pretty sure that was sarcasm.
Given the narratives pushed by our Democrats in the comments nowadays it's almost impossible to tell.
Well, given that the NWS is in the Department of Commerce, that makes sense.
By the way, I honestly don't know who to believe. We seem to be in some paradigm of "Schrodinger's budgeting". Trump and DOGE either failed to cut anything from the federal budget and/or the budget has been slashed so catastrophically that the Republic may not survive. Only when the situation is observed does one or the other state of affairs make itself known.
If you were woke, such cognitive dissonance would seem perfectly natural.
But it must cause some brain damage over time.
They exist in the superimposition of the states of delusion and reality which is their natural state - so yes, it would seem natural.
I love the 'Schrödingerian' explanation, it makes perfect sense.
Not true or logical.
You get 'over-forecasting' , happens where I live.
>> The result was predictable: A bad forecast leading to the death of children in a horrific flood.
how is a forecast the predictable result?
A better article on the facts about the incident.
https://justthenews.com/nation/states/center-square/despite-national-state-warnings-kerr-county-camp-mystic-didnt-evacuate
Democrats caused it. Prove they didn't.
They are lying about it. But you knew that.
Confession by projection. Your team is lying about it. What are you guys lying about specifically?
And here I thought your mantra here was "fuck those people".
What lies sarc?
You are a drunk, partisan asshole. Prove you are not.
Lies, damn lies, and "journalism".
All this bullshit has already been shown false.
Come on, man. Official Media, in the blue bubbles, can never be false.
Everyone knows the tariffs caused it.
OMG...You got me. Glad I wasn't drinking, I would have spit it everywhere. lol.
Previous flooding in Texas has been as a result of poor planning, building in an area designed as a flood overflow reservoir for instance. It did not occur to me to blame traitortrump for this, as it is the states responsibility to keep their residents safe from avoidable disasters. Oh, but they will cash the FEMA checks won't they
It’s not the states responsibility. That’s a slave’s mentality. Or a child’s.
When the stare says it’s safe because of what they did, and insurance companies charge accordingly, then they bear some responsibility.
So, "fuck those people", right?
Sounds like you support CARES now.
I took umbrage with the “responsibility to keep residents safe from avoidable disasters”, which to me is saying the state should protect you.
The state says all kinds of things. It’s up to you (royal you) as a grown ass adult to evaluate a situation and decide whether it is actually safe or not.
(Not to be confused with the state subsidizing building in flood plains, which is not the state saying it’s safe to build somewhere but rather that when something happens you’ll be compensated accordingly.)
Only a clueless housebound keyboard pounder believes that an insurance company would knowingly set itself up to lose money by saying an unsafe place was safe,.
Can the state protect us from your stupidity?
"...It did not occur to me to blame traitortrump for this,..."
For a TDS-addled slimy pile of lefty shit, that's encouraging!
But fuck off and die anyway, asswipe.
Well it's been tough seeing the pictures of all of the little girls lost in the flood. But if we decide that somehow government failed them we are left endorsing the proposition that government is the answer to everything including the unpredictable machinations of the earth itself. It's always been the basis of my own personal libertarian philosophy that you have to accept the reality that shit happens. Once you stray from that reality you will always demanding that somebody somehow fix the problem whatever it is. That somebody will inevitably be government. It's this mindset that has brought Europe and their colonies to their economic knees as they battle the ever illusive climate change. I live across the road from a little river. I get flash flood alerts every time it rains. But my property is 200 feet above the flood plane. Never cost me a minute of sleep. I'm pretty much agnostic but I'm open to the proposition that there exists a mystical place where the soul continues to exist in some form. Seems unlikely to me but I am not omniscient. If so I hope these beautiful children find their way. Sorry but this shit just too depressing.
Yeah, all deaths in a natural disaster like this are tragic, but thinking about all the young girls lost is heart-breaking. And that makes it easy (and perhaps true) that somebody failed them.
But this goes back to the dawn of humanity, and a primary role for parents: protect their children. And even doing everything possible is still sometimes not enough.
Ultimately, we can't do much when a once-in-a-thousand-year event devastates an area and puts people at risk. Even a government that claimed that superpower would be lying.
influencers are the lowest form of life
'National Weather Service' is yet another function that would be best handled via an interstate compact. Weather is about as local as you can get - and local government is the ONLY way to handle the last-mile (or individual-citizen) problem. Putting weather satellites in orbit, gathering data from them 'over the horizon', and providing a way to notify those local governments is exactly where a federal function could save money - and be constitutional within an interstate compact form.
I notice this article is not writing some idiotic article that says a 'privatized weather service' would work. Because it transparently would not work - and didn't. Though I expect someone from Cato will write some cronyist gibberish arguing that NWS could be sold for 6c on the dollar to some VC backed Big Tech venture that would
make a fortunebe more efficient than government as long as govt keeps funding it.NWS is probably one of the functions a federal government should handle due to other, more military reasons. That is where the NWS came from in the first place, the Signal Corps. FEMA could be handed more at the state level, but NWS, given what it's there for, is probably more a federal function.
'The Texas Floods Were a Natural Disaster, Not a Policy Disaster'
Unless you believe that government should (1) know everything, (2) use that knowledge to protect people from all possible dangers, and (3) never, ever never make a mistake.
And for human-centered people, even (especially) those that believe in The Science, there is no such thing as a natural disaster, since all things happen only because we do/don't do something. Plus a disaster is a terrible thing to waste.
""Unless you believe that government should (1) know everything, (2) use that knowledge to protect people from all possible dangers, and (3) never, ever never make a mistake.""
Democrats!!
'Meteorologists in the media have countered that the Texas disaster shows how important a fully staffed NWS is for providing advance warning of impending disasters. Cuts to the agency could leave it under-resourced for future disasters.'
What if each person in Texas was assigned a personal NWS team, who could make sure they know what to do 24/7? My guess is that means at least 5 government workers for each Texan.
BTW, the government employee union really, really, really approves this message.
I like how literally no one except me seems to notice that the mainstream has literally gotten to the place where they believe that if you tithe to a cabal of priests in the Government, they can do a rain dance to appease the gods and fix the weather next Wednesday. They literally believe that.
But the real question: do they believe that because they think it's true, or because they can then find heretics who refuse to accept the holy doctrine, and burn them at the stake?
The local government was thinking about putting up flood warning sirens, but the local community did not want to spend money on it. So yes, it was a policy disaster.
Probably because they knew the sirens would be blasting every time it sprinkled.
A blasting siren in a flash flood would yield the same result. That's why it is called a 'flash' flood.
Dammit, stop with the facts already. Its confusing them.
Anyone not mourning the dead of this tragedy and trying to gain from it, especially by suggesting it happened due to ineffective leadership or preparedness is disgusting and should be slapped upside the head before being forced to sit in the corner to think of their selfish and thoughtless behaviour. Sick f***ers
See Molly above.
We're only talking about this because MAGA policy is blaming someone else for anything bad that happens, pretend it doesn't exist or that it never did. Their governing strategy is to pull people apart, to sow seeds of hatred and fear, rather than to solve problems, make things better, spread as much peace and happiness as possible. This is a sad, catastrophic event that was no one's doing but the darkness over this country gets worse each day.
and to make it darker you posted this hateful negative shrink-souled poorly-written screed
minus the brain more like it.
Speaking of hate, did you mourn when the bullet missed Ed?
I mourned the poor soul who was killed there in front of his family, a gruesome, heartless sacrifice to the MAGA agenda. The rest was/is theater without regard to proper physics.
You're a gruesome addition to the comments page. Yikes.
Are you trying to get fired, Christian? ORANGE MAN BAD. That's the only reason bad things happen, especially to children. Check your style book.
The devastating Texas flash flood was not caused or made worse by any cuts, lack of man-power, or even climate change. Items that can be learned is improving the cellular coverage in the area and perhaps building a siren system akin to the tornado siren system or even better expanding the tornado siren system to include flash flood warnings. Possibly altering the current to pulse the siren so it sounds different.
Items that can be learned is
improving the cellular coverage in the area and perhaps building a siren system akin to the tornado siren system or even better expanding the tornado siren system to include flash flood warnings. Possibly altering the current to pulse the siren so it sounds different.The media will wholly manufacture a story on a topic about which they know little to nothing in order to exploit the deaths of innocent and unrelated people to their own ends. You cannot hate them enough.
Cellular isn't rain-and-flood-proof and still relies on human factors. Even directly re-engineering the river is a dubious solution as the location in question was sought out specifically for its lack of development. If they wanted the modern human experience of camping out above an aquaduct with cell coverage, they could go to LA. Except of course, there, today, they'd probably want to avoid the parts like Laguna Beach that people are being evacuated from because it's on fire.
This tragedy will affect the survivors forever. Yet, the Democrats have no problem politicizing it for their own purposes. This is the usual Democrat playbook. I'm surprised they haven't blamed Trump for the senseless shootings in Chicago and Philadelphia this past week but give them time and they will come up with a reason.
Latest death toll is over 80 but is no doubt going to be higher as more are found. The families are left to grieve while the politicians attempt to make political hay out of this is beyond disgusting.
They blame the NRA for the shootings in Chicago and Philadelphia
Mass Shootings, Natural Disasters, etc.
The Right: "Thoughts and prayers."
The Left: "F'ing Trump! We don't think and certainly don't pray!"
Politics likes to blame the other party for everything.
This is politics and part of what makes politics a horrible thing.
I expect politics to be politics. What is sad is people who have let politics consume every aspect of their lives. They will not let a tragedy be just a tragedy.
Ahh Christian, like the typical MSM narrativist you are.
There's no evidence that cuts to the National Weather Service impacted the response to the weekend's tragic flash floods.
Funny you frame it that way. An honest person would have said, "There's a great degree of evidence to the contrary that cuts to the National Weather Service impacted the response to the weekend's tragic flash floods."
Real journalism isn't about half-truths. It's also about calling out the easily provable lies of others.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D–N.Y.) has called for a probe into whether cuts to the NWS played a role in the weekend's disaster.
In response, the The American People have called for a noose to be thrown over a tree for Chuck Schumer's neck.
In the aftermath of California's fires, it was largely conservatives blaming various liberal policies for the loss of life and property.
Boaf sides! *drink*
And yet, as I wrote in the aftermath of the fires, the real culprit was bad weather, not bad public policy.
No, the real culprit was bad public policy. Texas, by your own admission, did not have bad public policy. California does, and it was conducive to making bad weather into a largely preventable catastrophic event.
The fact that the Trump administration's cuts to NWS didn't affect this most recent disaster in Texas doesn't tell us much about the wisdom of those cuts.
The fact that the word "Trump" is even being used at all in this article or on this subject is despicable. The fact that's the first place anyone's brain even goes is a testament to how inexcusably indecent this society has become.
Ah come on, blaming someone is what we do! If not weather service cuts it must be DEI. Or is it giving trans kids hormone blockers? We gotta have controversy!
Perhaps the most reasonable article Britches has ever written for Reason.
Don't let him fool you. He's faking reason in order to seem credible.
He. Is. Not.
"The agency issued a flood watch on Thursday afternoon, a flash flood warning by 1 a.m. on Friday (about an hour after rains started), and a flash flood emergency urging evacuations at around 4 a.m.—about an hour before the most serious flooding occurred."
"'We had adequate staffing. We had adequate technology,' Greg Waller, service coordination hydrologist with the NWS West Gulf River Forecast Center in Fort Worth, told The Texas Tribune. An official with the NWS union also told the Tribune that local staffing was adequate to provide timely warnings."
"Independent meteorologists have also defended NWS's performance."
But of course, those listening to the news with the "how can we blame this on Trump" mentality skip over the facts. The facts don't matter. Also note above the word before meterologists...independent. Now contrast that with this: "Meteorologists in the media have countered that the Texas disaster shows how important a fully staffed NWS...."
Note "in the media". Now they surely wouldn't have an agenda, would they?" LOL.
No wonder aliens don't come to this planet.
"What, land there? No way, that's Earth! They even politicize the Weather!"
"No way!"
"Yep. Their media is filled with who's in what position, who screwed who over for this and that, who is the best & worst...on and on. It's like a 27 hour/day soap opera (well they did invent those too)."
"But they do have some funny cat videos."