White House Ousts Top U.S.-Mexico Water Official; Interior Secretary Puts DOGE Rep In Charge Of Cuts; Cloud Seeding At Crossroads; Funding Restored At U.S. Weather Sites
The Trump administration on Monday demanded the resignation of
the top federal official overseeing a dispute between the
United States and Mexico over untreated sewage flowing across
the border into California. Maria-Elena Giner, who leads
the International Boundary and Water Commission, said in an
interview Monday that White House officials asked her to resign
by the end of the day and threatened to fire her
otherwise. The commission plays a crucial role in
navigating cross-border water conflicts, including the
[Colorado River], ongoing sewage crisis facing coastal
California communities and dwindling water deliveries to
farmers in South Texas.
… In an order issued Thursday, (Interior Secretary Doug)
Burgum put Tyler Hassen, who came to the Interior Department as
a representative of the U.S. DOGE Service, in charge of a
sweeping effort to “create significant efficiencies” and
eliminate “redundant efforts” across the department. Hassen’s
broad portfolio includes IT, human resources, training,
financial management, international affairs, contracting,
communications and other tasks. … Hassen’s decisions
could have major implications for how Interior — which is
responsible for maintaining national parks, protecting
endangered species, and overseeing drilling in public lands and
waters — operates going forward. … One
of Hassen’s first tasks after President Donald Trump’s
inauguration was visiting a Northern California water pumping
station to push one of Trump’s long-standing priorities:
rerouting water from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta to other
parts of the state.
Humans have the technology to literally make snow fall from the
clouds. In the drought-stricken Southwest, where the
Colorado River needs every drop of water it
can get, there are calls to use it more. Utah, home to the
nation’s largest cloud seeding program, is at the crossroads of
the technology’s past and future. The state has become a
proving ground for cloud seeding in the West, with water
managers, private sector investors, and conspiracy theorists
keeping a close eye on their progress. … Utah’s
cloud seeding program is being closely watched by others around
the region. Its efforts cover more ground than any other state
in the nation, and it has one of the strongest bases of state
funding. For that reason, other water-short states in the
Western U.S. are keeping an eye on how much return on
investment Utah is getting from a $5 million annual cloud
seeding budget and those efficiency-boosting tech upgrades.
The websites
for four regional climate centers funded
by the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or
NOAA, returned to service Monday after
an outage linked to expired contracts, according to
service notifications. The sites shut last week after a funding
lapse compromised NOAA’s contracts with the research
universities that operate the centers, which provide custom
weather analysis tools across 27 states. The Southern Regional
Climate Center, housed at Texas A&M University, is
receiving “stopgap” funding to restore service, director John
Nielsen-Gammon said in an interview Monday, with a full-year
contract extension expected to come sometime in the next
several weeks.