The disastrous floods that swept through Hill Country and caused the deaths of 80 or more people were made worse by human error.
The New York Times found that the local branches of the National Weather Service were short on staff; critical positions were empty. The computer specialists who worked for Elon Musk in an operation called DOGE decided that too many people worked for the National Weather Service. Some meteorologists took buyouts, others resigned.
Furthermore the affected area did not have an early warning ststem. Local taxpayers didn’t want to pay for it.
The quasi-libertarian belief that we don’t need government services and we shouldn’t pay for them took a toll on innocent people.
The combination of Musk’s ruthless cost-cutting and local hostility to taxes set the stage for a disastrous tragedy.
The Times reported:
Crucial positions at the local offices of the National Weather Service were unfilled as severe rainfall inundated parts of Central Texas on Friday morning, prompting some experts to question whether staffing shortages made it harder for the forecasting agency to coordinate with local emergency managers as floodwaters rose.
Texas officials appeared to blame the Weather Service for issuing forecasts on Wednesday that underestimated how much rain was coming. But former Weather Service officials said the forecasts were as good as could be expected, given the enormous levels of rainfall and the storm’s unusually abrupt escalation.
The staffing shortages suggested a separate problem, those former officials said — the loss of experienced people who would typically have helped communicate with local authorities in the hours after flash flood warnings were issued overnight.
The shortages are among the factors likely to be scrutinized as the death toll climbs from the floods. Separate questions have emerged about the preparedness of local communities, including Kerr County’s apparent lack of a local flood warning system. The county, roughly 50 miles northwest of San Antonio, is where many of the deaths occurred.
In an interview, Rob Kelly, the Kerr County judge and its most senior elected official, said the county did not have a warning system because such systems are expensive, and local residents are resistant to new spending.
“Taxpayers won’t pay for it,” Mr. Kelly said. Asked if people might reconsider in light of the catastrophe, he said, “I don’t know.”
The National Weather Service’s San Angelo office, which is responsible for some of the areas hit hardest by Friday’s flooding, was missing a senior hydrologist, staff forecaster and meteorologist in charge, according to Tom Fahy, the legislative director for the National Weather Service Employees Organization, the union that represents Weather Service workers.
The Weather Service’s nearby San Antonio office, which covers other areas hit by the floods, also had significant vacancies, including a warning coordination meteorologist and science officer, Mr. Fahy said. Staff members in those positions are meant to work with local emergency managers to plan for floods, including when and how to warn local residents and help them evacuate.
That office’s warning coordination meteorologist left on April 30, after taking the early retirement package the Trump administration used to reduce the number of federal employees, according to a person with knowledge of his departure.
Sign up for Your Places: Extreme Weather. Get notified about extreme weather before it happens with custom alerts for places in the U.S. you choose. Get it sent to your inbox.
Some of the openings may predate the current Trump administration. But at both offices, the vacancy rate is roughly double what it was when Mr. Trump returned to the White House in January, according to Mr. Fahy.

This is going to get a lot worse, and many people are going to die because of the racist, fascist, convicted rapist, fraud, felon and traitor in the White House, who won elections in 2016 and in 2024 based on lies and false promises fooling his racist, America First MAGA cult.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Reassurance to the nation from the Grifter-in-Chief: “BIG, BEAUTIFUL DELUGE!!”
LikeLiked by 1 person
Conservatives need to wake up to the fact that communities require investment. The people in Texas need to face facts. When people froze to death in their homes because the power grid was inadequate, they still voted conservative. When the police sat on the sidelines and the children of Uvalde, TX, were massacred, the people continued to support Abbott. Now at least 80 people including children have been washed away by floods, and Texans should rethink their priorities. The GOP is no longer simply conservative. It is cruel, brutal and dangerously cheap about essential public services. GOP = Greed over people!
LikeLiked by 2 people
“Conservatives need to wake up to the fact that communities require investment.”
The essential point. Of course rather than view “community” as a nourishing, life-sustaining social organization, requiring continual investment in its own right to allow us a reasonable chance to lead meaningful lives – indeed even to live, period – instead we have the conservative-(some)Texan-Trumpian-GOP-vulture-capitalism-private-equity mindset that the community represents an asset to be bought out, taken over, pillaged for short-term profit, then the remains sold off to feed its gluttony even further. See for example https://chrishedges.substack.com/p/a-rogue-reporter-vs-the-american?utm_source=publication-search and https://chrishedges.substack.com/p/the-chris-hedges-report-with-pulitzer?utm_source=publication-search.
It is cruel, brutal, and dangerous.
LikeLiked by 1 person
XK,
That’s the point. Rugged individualism does not build community. It destroys community. People need to help their neighbors by investments that benefit all.
LikeLiked by 1 person
“Rugged individualism does not build community. It destroys community.”
Yes, for certain, that and a psychopathological outlook that a) a human being’s inherent worth is determined by the market, and is directly and solely proportional to his or her income statement and balance sheet, and b) everything’s for sale.
Should you be doing any estate planning, you may wish to take a look at “How much is your data worth? Mmm, somewhere between half a cent and $1,200,” The Atlantic. http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2012/03/how-much-is-your-data-worth-mmm-somewhere-between-half-a-cent-and-1-200/254730
LikeLike
Just speaking to the TX power grid, as I have some background there.
TX is reported as opting for its own power grid at the turn of this century [i.e., no connection to either E or W interstate power grids], but they have been headed in that direction since interstate grids started in 1935. Because they are so large that they encompass two time-zones, they have been able to juggle power needs sufficiently to meet demand on their own—although a fragile balance (as we saw in Feb 2021). Exacerbated by TX’s stolidly anti-regulatory position (a benefit maintained by not being connected to intrastate/ fed-monitored grid]. This has benefited them in some ways: allowed them to develop 25% of power from wind turbines—cheap power, but out of balance, per fed stds, & a system that can’t in fact operate at all under freezing conditions. Also allowed them to operate their 44% natural-gas-generated power with zero winterizing, & dangerous practices such as allowing older back-up plants to just rust away, instead of maintaining them in case of emergency.
Facts are, it would cost TX a tremendous investment to connect up their E/W & N/S transmission/ distribution systems (which would help a lot)– less to at least connect at E & W to available intrastate grids—and they show no inclination to do either. It may take a couple more disastrous climate-change incidents to get them moving in that direction. [Note: it’s estimated about 800 Texans lost their lives in the Feb ’21 freeze.]
LikeLike
Just speaking to the TX power grid, as I have some background there.
TX is reported as opting for its own power grid at the turn of this century [i.e., no connection to either E or W interstate power grids], but they have been headed in that direction since interstate grids started in 1935. Because they are so large that they encompass two time-zones, they have been able to juggle power needs sufficiently to meet demand on their own—although a fragile balance (as we saw in Feb 2021). Exacerbated by TX’s stolidly anti-regulatory position (a benefit maintained by not being connected to intrastate/ fed-monitored grid]. This has benefited them in some ways: allowed them to develop 25% of power from wind turbines—cheap power, but out of balance, per fed stds, & a system that can’t in fact operate at all under freezing conditions. Also allowed them to operate their 44% natural-gas-generated power with zero winterizing, & dangerous practices such as allowing older back-up plants to just rust away, instead of maintaining them in case of emergency.
Facts are, it would cost TX a tremendous investment to connect up their E/W & N/S transmission/ distribution systems (which would help a lot)– less to at least connect at E & W to available intrastate grids—and they show no inclination to do either. It may take a couple more disastrous climate-change incidents to get them moving in that direction. [Note: it’s estimated about 800 Texans lost their lives in the Feb ’21 freeze.]
LikeLike
Don’t forget the Enablers.
When we had 3 branches of government, Congress would have approved executive orders, set hearings and testimony for slashing departments, and investigated.
The president, musk, and cabinet are directly responsible for firings, funding cuts, misleading the public.
Congress is responsible for not investigating and holding the president and executive branch.
The media are responsible for not interviewing congressmen where they stand on the issue and get direct answers to question.
Where is the pressure, outrage, and social media / full page ads showing blaming the culprits, not the victims.
LikeLike
There are plain-as-day underlying causal realities and lessons to learn that no “moments of crisis” must be allowed to sweep away, lest denialism of Trump’s cruelty and wickedness persist.
LikeLike