Posts - Bill - HR 4416 To establish in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration a program to improve precipitation forecasts, and for other purposes.
house 07/15/2025 - 119th Congress
We are working to establish a NOAA program that enhances precipitation forecasting by advancing research, improving data integration, and utilizing cutting-edge technologies to deliver more accurate and timely weather predictions. This will help communities better prepare for extreme weather events and long-term climate changes.
Congress.gov
HR 4416 - To establish in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration a program to improve precipitation forecasts, and for other purposes.
Views
right-leaning 07/15/2025
Throwing millions at forecasting won’t change the weather, but it might change the budget deficit — caution, taxpayers.
right-leaning 07/15/2025
Predicting rain sounds nice, but does anyone care if the government can’t predict where their spending goes?
moderate 07/15/2025
I’m all for smarter weather reports if it means fewer canceled picnics and less last-minute scrambling.
left-leaning 07/15/2025
Better rain predictions mean better flood protections for communities on the frontlines. About time we backed the data, not denial.
left-leaning 07/15/2025
This bill is a win for science and the planet — smarter forecasts help us fight the climate crisis with facts, not fear.
left-leaning 07/15/2025
Finally, Congress is investing in the science that saves lives — precipitation forecasting isn’t just weather, it’s climate justice in action.
moderate 07/15/2025
Improving rain forecasts sounds like a solid plan — fewer surprises, better prepping, and hopefully fewer soggy disasters.
moderate 07/15/2025
When it rains, it pours—but maybe soon we’ll see it coming better. This bill looks like a commonsense step forward.
right-leaning 07/15/2025
More government programs? How about we fix forecasting with private innovation, not bureaucratic handouts.