『Kentucky Tornado Outbreak Amid Staffing Shortages as Severe Weather Season Continues』のカバーアート

Kentucky Tornado Outbreak Amid Staffing Shortages as Severe Weather Season Continues

Kentucky Tornado Outbreak Amid Staffing Shortages as Severe Weather Season Continues

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  • May 2025 (Earlier in the month): Five former directors of the National Weather Service write a "letter to the American people" expressing concern about staffing shortages and reduced resources, such as weather balloon deployments.
  • May 15, 2025: USA TODAY publishes an article highlighting that National Weather Service offices are short-staffed following Trump administration cuts, with some offices no longer operating 24/7. The article also mentions offers for current employees to transfer to fill 155 vacant positions, including 76 meteorologist positions.
  • May 16, 2025 (Thursday): The National Weather Service office in Jackson, Kentucky, recognizing the threat of a major severe weather outbreak, decides to fully staff the overnight shift despite being short-staffed.
  • May 17, 2025 (Friday): A severe weather system sweeps through the central U.S., including Missouri and Kentucky.
  • Afternoon Rush Hour (St. Louis): The path of destruction from a likely tornado begins on a major thoroughfare in St. Louis before moving east.
  • Friday (Throughout the day): A tornado strikes several rural areas in Scott County, Missouri, killing two people and injuring several others.
  • Friday (Throughout the day): Five people die and 38 are injured in the St. Louis area. Over 5,000 homes in the city are affected.
  • Friday (Overnight into Saturday): A devastating tornado impacts Laurel County, Kentucky, at 11:49 p.m.
  • May 17, 2025 (Saturday):
  • Morning: As of Saturday morning, at least 21 people have died across Missouri and Kentucky (14 in Kentucky, 7 in Missouri). The death toll is expected to rise.
  • Saturday: Rescue teams continue searching for survivors in damaged areas.
  • Saturday (Throughout the day): City inspectors in St. Louis begin condemning unsafe structures.
  • Saturday evening: Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear confirms at least 18 deaths in Kentucky and speaks at a press conference in London, Kentucky.
  • Saturday evening: St. Louis Mayor Cara Spencer confirms five deaths in the city, over 30 injuries, and approximately 5,000 impacted buildings.
  • Saturday night (9 p.m. to 6 a.m. Sunday): A curfew is in effect in St. Louis due to downed power lines and to protect property.
  • May 18, 2025 (Sunday):
  • As of Sunday, the death toll from the recent storms across multiple states exceeds two dozen.
  • Sunday: In London, Kentucky, people whose houses were destroyed work to salvage belongings and put up tarps. Zach Wilson describes the scene at his parents' ruined home.
  • Sunday: St. Louis Fire Chief Dennis Jenkerson warns residents to prepare for approaching weather.
  • Sunday: The National Weather Service warns of a "multitude of hazardous weather" expected over the next several days.
  • Sunday: City inspectors continue to assess damaged areas in St. Louis and condemn unsafe structures.
  • Sunday: Authorities confirm two storm-related deaths in the Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C., caused by falling trees.
  • Sunday: The NWS Employees Union confirms that short staffing at the Jackson, Kentucky office did not affect tornado warnings for the deadly storms.
  • Week of May 19, 2025:
  • More severe storms are expected to roll across the central U.S.
  • Thunderstorms are expected to develop in the afternoon and persist into the evening across parts of the Plains into the Ozarks.
  • Another storm system is expected to pick up to the west, with strong tornadoes in the forecast for parts of the Plains by Sunday.

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