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Meteorology Matters

Meteorology Matters

By: Rob Jones
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Meteorology Matters delivers clear, data-driven insight into weather, hurricanes, and climate science cutting through hype to explain what’s happening and why it matters.

Created by Meteorologist Rob Jones, the podcast explores:

  • Extreme weather and hurricane forecasting
  • Climate trends and real-world impacts
  • Forecast uncertainty and what the data actually shows
  • How weather science affects safety, infrastructure, and daily life

Whether it’s breaking weather risk, long-range outlooks, or deep-dive analysis, Meteorology Matters helps you understand what’s happening and why it matters.

Hurricane Company
Politics & Government Science
Episodes
  • America is Going Ocean Blind: Critical Sensors Are Being Removed
    Jun 5 2026

    Another major setback to US Ocean research policy due to the Trump Administration’s attack on science.

    The federal government is dismantling much of the Ocean Observatories Initiative, a vast network of nearly 900 deep-ocean sensors that track ocean temperatures, marine heatwaves, fisheries conditions, carbon absorption, and changes in major ocean currents.

    Supporters say the move reflects changing priorities and a more flexible research strategy. Critics warn it could leave scientists, fishermen, coastal communities, and weather researchers with fewer tools to monitor a rapidly changing ocean.

    At the same time, proposed changes to federal grantmaking could fundamentally alter how scientific research is funded in the United States, raising questions about peer review, political oversight, international collaboration, and America’s future role in global climate and ocean science.

    In this episode of Meteorology Matters, we examine what’s being removed, what’s changing, who is affected, and what the long-term implications could be for weather forecasting, climate research, marine industries, and scientific leadership worldwide.

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    26 mins
  • The Hurricane Checklist Most People Forget: How to Make Your Home Survive the Storm
    Jun 1 2026

    Hurricane season is here, but real preparation is about more than buying water and batteries.

    In this episode of Meteorology Matters, created by meteorologist Rob Jones, we look at what actually helps homes survive hurricanes: sealed roofs, protected windows, stronger garage doors, hurricane shutters, flood barriers, backup power, insurance documentation, and the overlooked steps many people forget until a storm is already approaching.

    We also explain why the “building envelope” matters, how one failed opening can lead to major structural damage, why closing interior doors can reduce pressure on a roof, and how modern mitigation standards such as FORTIFIED construction can lower risk and reduce losses.

    The episode also looks back 100 years to the devastating 1926 Great Miami Hurricane and the October 1926 Cuba Hurricane, showing why historical storms still matter today as millions of people live in hurricane-prone areas.

    Preparedness is not panic. It is planning, mitigation, and giving your family and your home the best chance before the storm arrives.

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    58 mins
  • FEMA’s Breaking Point: Can America Survive the Next Big Disaster?
    May 29 2026

    As the 2026 hurricane season begins, FEMA faces one of the most turbulent periods in its history.

    More than 5,000 employees have left the agency since 2025. Leadership has changed repeatedly. Disaster-response staffing remains stretched, while a new federal reform plan proposes shifting more responsibility from Washington to states and local governments.

    Supporters say the changes could reduce bureaucracy and make disaster recovery more efficient. Critics warn they could leave vulnerable communities with fewer resources when major disasters strike.

    In this episode of Meteorology Matters, we examine FEMA’s readiness for the 2026 hurricane season, the agency’s workforce and leadership challenges, proposed changes to federal disaster policy, the future of flood insurance, and what these reforms could mean for hurricane-prone states like Florida and communities across America.

    As hurricanes, floods, wildfires, and other extreme weather events continue to test emergency management systems, one question looms over the season ahead:

    Is FEMA prepared for the next major disaster, or is the nation entering a new era of disaster response?

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    28 mins
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